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The Louis Bonduelle Foundation Conference 2011
10 May 2011: Mankind’s relationship with food: past, present and future
The human race did not come into being in one day, but through a process of evolution and coevolution. Humans adapted their eating habits to the products available in their environment, but also according to the fellow beings with whom they shared their meals. From this long history of nutrition emerged consumer habits that today are brought into question by a multitude of messages regarding health, the environment, or ethics. Since then, even if today’s omnivorous consumers know the effect that diet has on their health, their food choices remain as perplexing, with a mixture of societal and public health considerations.
© Puget/Amarante-photogalerie/Fondation Louis Bonduelle
In this respect, Pascal Picq from the Collège de France shares his views on paleoanthropology with us: “In two generations, our societies have wiped out millenniums of cultural evolution regarding our knowledge of vegetable and animal resources in our diet, and everything about how we consume them.” Today, many of us don’t go to the market anymore, don’t prepare our own food, don’t eat together as a family, etc. And according to our expert, this is where we must look for the root of the current obesity problem, “a result of junk food leading to the disappearance of the convivial, affective and social aspects of eating”. Eaters must therefore go back to thinking of eating as a complete, overall social act, and not just a mere function.
But being a consumer in 2001 also means being a responsible citizen, as Dr. Martine Padilla, an expert in populations’ nutritional safety, eating habits and public policy at CIHEAM-IAMM in Montpellier, reminds us. We are under ceaseless fire nowadays with the emphasis on “sustainable eating” and the sometimes conflicting choices between the public good and personal health that consumers are faced with. With the gravity of their social and environmental responsibility, coupled with their desire for economic solidarity and transparency, today’s consumers operate in a spirit of guilt-ridden confusion: torn between local and imported products, seasonal vegetables and those available all year round, organic or conventional foods, eating meat or becoming vegetarian. And in these matters, even the experts are divided: “Without sufficient studies, the answers are sometimes counterintuitive,” the sociologist points out.
We therefore have to wait for science to serve its purpose and for research to progress through large-scale initiatives like the NutriNet-Santé (nutritional health) survey. “With the quantity and quality of the information gathered, and the size of the sample, the NutriNet-Santé cohort will help us build a gigantic database on the French population’s nutrition and health, which will be one of the largest epidemiological databases on health in the world,” says Prof. Serge Hercberg, head of the nutritional epidemiology research unit INSERM/INRA/CNAM/Paris13, which coordinates the project. Launched in May 2009, this French survey aspires to monitor 500,000 individuals for a period of ten years, and the team continues to include new “nutrinauts” (www.etude-nutrinet-sante.fr). Their mission: making French people aware of their eating habits. Watch this space…
Presentations and abstracts
The delegate pack :
>> Summary of Scientific Lectures (in French)
>> Latest News from the Louis Bonduelle Foundation (in French)
Discussions with:
Pascal Picq, Paleoanthropologist at the Collège de France
Martine Padilla, Expert in food security of populations, dietary behaviour and public policies
Pascale Isnard, Child Psychiatrist, AP-HP Robert Debré Hospital and Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital, Unit Inserm 669, PSIGIAM
Géraldine Comoretto, Université de Versailles St Quentin in Yvelines, Laboratory ALISS - INRA and Winner of the Louis Bonduelle Research Prize 2009
Christophe Bonduelle – President of the Louis Bonduelle Foundation




