Department Overview
Community nutrition encompasses a broad set of activities designed to provide access to a safe, adequate, healthful diet and create changes in knowledge, attitudes, and behavior either individually or in small groups within a community setting. These activities include nutrition education, nutrition or health promotion, food programs, supplementation programs, preventive programs, local policy analysis and development. The data derived from the application of epidemiologic techniques should lead to a better comprehension of the host-diet-environment relationship and the links between diet, human health and the nutritional outcomes. The utilization of the resulting data should provide evidence that can support public health and nutrition recommendations from policy levels to its translation into the programs and projects at the operational level.
The Department is composed of nine faculty members (including four Professors, three Associate Professors, and two Assistant Professors).
Faculty members in Community Nutrition are concerned with:
Mission Statement:
Department of Community Nutrition is a pioneering department with a mission centered on promotion, research and education in nutritional status, food security, dietary pattern, restoration and enrichments, food programming and related problem in society.
By encouraging and supporting innovative research, this department aims to enhance understanding of nutritional problem in community and to improve the search for primary diagnosis and preventive possibilities.
Goals:
The routine test performed in the laboratory includes:
• Measuring the weight, height of people