First 1,000 days and beyond: How can industry help set kids up for a healthy future?

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Join us at Positive Nutrition 2024: Healthy Innovation for the Mass Market to explore good nutrition strategies for youngsters. GettyImages/10'000 Hours (Getty Images)

As understanding around the importance of early years nutrition grows, so too does the opportunity for manufacturers to meet demands for health and functionality. Join us at FoodNavigator’s upcoming digital summit Positive Nutrition 2024 as we discuss the health needs of carers and their offspring.

Europe continues to struggle with high levels of childhood obesity. But as understanding around the importance of early years nutrition grows, so too does the opportunity for manufacturers to meet demands for health and functionality.

How can industry best support carers and babies in the first 1,000 days, and help set kids up for a healthy future? At FoodNavigator’s upcoming digital summit Positive Nutrition 2024, we’ll seek to answer this and more…

14 March: Food for Kids

11am CET Fireside chat

Nutrition in the early years: Challenges and opportunities from pre-conception to childhood

Could milk and formula only be part of the ‘early life nutrition’ story? Nestlé believes nurturing the health of carers is also a crucial component, and the FMCG major is innovating to expand its reach in this space. We catch up with Dr Sara Colombo Mottaz, head of medical, scientific and regulatory affairs under Nestlé’s Nutrition Strategic Business Unit, to talk adequate and appropriate nutrition in the early years.

Speaker: Dr Sara Colombo Mottaz, head of medical, scientific and regulatory affairs, Nutrition Strategic Business Unit, Nestlé

11:20am Panel discussion

Early life nutrition: Feeding the next generation of fussy eaters

From pre-prepared foods to ready meals and even recipe boxes aimed at youngsters, baby and children’s food categories are expanding. Manufacturers have a responsibility to get the nutrition right, so what innovative strategies are being leveraged to marry nutrition and convenience for fussy eaters? How can ingredients, technologies, and creative approaches encourage healthy habits from a young age?

Speakers:

  • Tobias Gunzenhauser, co-founder and CEO, yamo
  • Laura Seymour, founder, Foodini Club
  • Mandy Bobrowski, marketing director, Organix
  • Dr Sara Colombo Mottaz, head of medical, scientific and regulatory affairs, Nutrition Strategic Business Unit, Nestlé

Positive Nutrition: Healthy Innovation for the Mass Market 12-14 March 2024

Over three days and six sessions, the interactive broadcast series will ask how industry can leverage innovation to produce healthier food and drink.

Food and beverage manufacturers are under more pressure than ever to deliver nutritious food for the mass market. At the same time, the concept of ‘healthy’ is changing. Where once shoppers were laser focused on low fat, salt and sugar, today’s consumer want that and more.

Which better-for-you trends are resonating most with consumers? And how can manufacturers best align this new future of wellness to mainstream categories, from snacking to drinks and convenience food?  

Positive Nutrition will be broadcast over three days 12-14 March 2024. Each day the morning session will start at 11am CET and the afternoon session from 3pm CET.

For more information on the programme, speakers, or to register for the free-to-attend event, visit the Positive Nutrition homepage.

12 March 2024

11am CET – Reformulation & Fortification: Changing Trends in Healthier Foods

'Unhealthy’ foods are in the spotlight, with shoppers wanting better-for-you alternatives. With these same consumers unwilling to compromise on taste, food manufacturers have a challenge on their hands: how can ‘baddies’ best be removed, and beneficial ingredients added, with positive nutrition in mind?

3pm CET – Plant-Based Under the Microscope

The plant-based market has boomed in the last decade, with projections it will double in value by 2030. But the recent dramatic slowdown suggests the category is not hitting the mark with shoppers. With health a major driver behind decisions to reduce meat and dairy intake, is the plant-based category’s associations with overprocessing and ‘unclean’ ingredients muddying its reputation? How can manufacturers improve the nutritional credentials of plant-based milk and dairy?

13 March 2024

11am CET – Food as Medicine

Today’s consumers are not turning to food and drink for energy alone. A more nuanced understanding of the relationship between diet and health is coming to shape consumer attitudes to food. So which ingredients offer greatest potential in health and wellness? We ask how the latest nutritional science is informing functional food and beverage trends.

3pm CET – Personalised Nutrition: Tapping into Data for Healthier Diets

Developments in personalised nutrition – whereby individualised dietary advice is offered based on genetic, environmental and lifestyle factors – continue apace. The market is forecast to grow to over $16bn by 2027. From measuring blood sugar responses to microbiome diversity, how is this novel sector expected to evolve? Can personalisation ever prove a boon for the masses?

14 March 2024

11am CET – Food for Kids

Europe continues to struggle with high levels of childhood obesity. But as understanding around the importance of early years nutrition grows, so too does the opportunity for manufacturers to meet demands for health and functionality. How can industry best support carers and babies in the first 1,000 days, and help set kids up for a healthy future?

3pm CET – Free-From

The free-from category is changing shape as more and more people follow restricted diets. These days consumers are not only turning away from common allergens gluten and shellfish, but also other widely used ingredients from soy to nuts and dairy. As an increasing number of people eliminate popular ingredients from their diets, what opportunities are opening up in the free-from space?

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