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Projects Related to the Dietary Guidelines

Updating the Dietary Guidelines for Americans (Dietary Guidelines) is a scientifically rigorous, multi-year process. Below are examples of Federal and non-Federal projects relevant to the Dietary Guidelines.

  • White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health
  • Dietary Reference Intakes
  • Healthy Eating Index
  • MyPlate Consumer Education Resources
  • Alcoholic Beverages and Health
  • Climate Change and Nutrition
  • Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans
  • Applying Systems Science in the Dietary Guidelines
  • National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine Study: Process to Update the Dietary Guidelines
Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (5)

White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health

For the first time in over 50 years, the White House hosted the White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health on September 28, 2022. The Biden-Harris Administration also released a National Strategy outlining actions the Federal government will take to achieve the bold goal of ending hunger and increasing healthy eating and physical activity by 2030.

The Biden-Harris Administration also announced more than $8 billion in new commitments as part of the Conference's call to action.

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (6)

Dietary Reference Intakes

Established by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (National Academies), the Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs) provide reference values for vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients that: 1) indicate daily intake amounts that meet the needs of most healthy people, 2) set intake levels not to exceed to avoid harm, and 3) reduce the risk of chronic disease.

These reference values provide an important source of evidence for the Dietary Guidelines by helping to understand if the population is meeting or exceeding nutrient needs through the foods and beverages consumed.

The Dietary Guidelines uses the DRIs to make food-based recommendations that help Americans to meet their nutrient needs. The Dietary Guidelines includes in Appendix 1 nutritional goals for different age-sex groups, which are based on the DRI nutrient standards. These nutritional goals are also included in the USDA Dietary Patterns to ensure that the patterns are designed to meet nutrient needs of individuals across the lifespan.

The National Academies establishes DRIs for the United States and Canada. The U.S. and Canadian governments work together through the Joint U.S.-Canada DRI Working Group to determine which DRIs need to be updated and to sponsor the DRI development process. The DRI Working Group prioritized updating the energy and macronutrient DRIs. The review of the energy DRI is now complete. The macronutrient DRIs will be updated over the next few years with evidence reviews beginning soon on protein and carbohydrates.

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (7)

Healthy Eating Index

The Healthy Eating Index (HEI) is a tool designed to evaluate how well a set of foods and beverages, such as the foods commonly consumed by Americans, aligns with dietary patterns recommendations from the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. The HEI-2020 aligns with the key recommendations from the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020-2025 (for those ages 2 years and older). Additionally, a newly developed tool, the HEI-Toddlers-2020 assesses how well diets of toddlers (ages 12 through 23 months) align with the new recommendations for this life stage. The publication of the HEI-2020 and HEI-Toddlers-2020 can be found in the May 2023 issue of theJournal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (8)

MyPlate Consumer Education Resources

MyPlate helps consumers put the Dietary Guidelines for Americans into action with inspiration and simple ideas for making healthy choices across the food groups. Visit MyPlate.gov for a suite of nutrition education resources:

  • MyPlate Tip Sheets: The tip sheets cover a variety of topics from food groups, healthy eating for different age groups, healthy eating on a budget, and so much more. All tip sheets are also available in Spanish. The Start Simple with MyPlate tip sheet is available in 20 additional languages.
  • Life Stages: Find key recommendations from the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and supporting consumer resources.
  • MyPlate Tools: Consumers can use these interactive tools to test their knowledge, get a food plan, set healthy eating goals, and more! Shop Simple with MyPlate is one example that empowers consumers with new ways to prepare budget-friendly foods and local SNAP savings. Find Spanish versions of many consumer resources at MiPlato en español.
  • Toolkits for Professionals: Use these toolkits as you communicate MyPlate’s food and nutrition messages to your audiences. Health professionals can search by topic and access over 80 printable tip sheets through the Print Materials library.
Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (9)

Alcoholic Beverages and Health

Alcoholic beverages and health remain a high priority topic. For the process to update the next edition, USDA and HHS determined the topic requires a comprehensive review with significant, specific expertise. HHS and USDA are addressing the scientific reviews on this topic through efforts separate from the work of the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee. The scientific reviews on adult alcohol consumption and health are being conducted by a Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Committee and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) working on complementary tracks. Both projects will include opportunities for public participation and will include external scientific peer review. These efforts are under way and slated to be completed by the end of December 2024. Each will result in a report with findings, not recommendations on alcohol consumption. These findings will be considered by HHS and USDA as the Departments develop the next edition of the Dietary Guidelines.

While both evidence reviews will address the relationship between alcohol and health, there are key distinctions between the two, including some of the outcomes being examined and the methods being used to conduct the studies. The table below provides a comparison of the two studies.

StudyPurposeMethods and Product
Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Prevention of Underage Drinking (ICCPUD) - Alcohol Intake and Health Study

To generate evidence on weekly alcohol consumption thresholds to minimize health risks by modelling cause-specific absolute risk curves based on disease-, injury-, and condition-specific relative risk curves from cohort studies from conditions that are thought to be causally related to alcohol use (e.g., liver cirrhosis and cancer).

This approach aligns with the current practices of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, and the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, when estimating the burden of disease attributable to alcohol use.

The alcohol intake and health study will use the following methods to generate evidence on weekly drinking thresholds to minimize health risks:

  • Lifetime risk modelling to estimate the lifetime risk of death and disability for different levels of average alcohol consumption.
  • Model cause-specific absolute risk curves based on disease-, injury-, and condition-specific relative risk curves.
  • Cohort studies from conditions that are thought to be causally related to alcohol use (e.g., liver cirrhosis and cancer)

The ICCPUD study will provide findings on risk estimates, not recommendations for alcohol consumption.

NASEM - Review of Evidence on Alcohol and HealthTo review, evaluate, and report on the current scientific evidence on the relationship between alcohol consumption and the following health outcomes:
  1. growth, size, body composition, and risk of overweight and obesity
  2. risk of certain types of cancer
  3. risk of cardiovascular disease
  4. neurocognitive health
  5. risk of all-cause mortality
  6. post-partum weight loss
  7. human milk composition and quantity
  8. Infant development milestones, including neurocognitive development

The NASEM study involves the conduct of systematic reviews.

The NASEM study will yield graded conclusion statements, not recommendations for adult alcohol consumption.

Visit our page to get more information about guidance on alcoholic beverages in the Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (10)

Climate Change and Nutrition

Sustainability and the complex relationship between nutrition and climate change is an important, cross-cutting, and high priority topic. HHS and USDA have activities underway on this topic to inform work across the Departments.

For example, a newly launched NIH initiative, “Agriculture and Diet: Value Added for Nutrition, Translation, and Adaptation in a Global Ecology: ADVANTAGE,” is led by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Office of Nutrition Research (ONR). This work is focused on research and will examine evidence to better understand the intersection of food systems, diet, nutrition, and health in a changing environment. NIH has supported similar initiatives on other topics.

Separately, USDA and HHS have convened a Federal Workgroup that is tasked with assessing the merits of various pathways to consider integrating sustainability into future editions of the Dietary Guidelines as well as other federal nutrition programs and policies, as appropriate. The Workgroup will host one public meeting to engage stakeholders in the process. The Workgroup’s recommendations for approaches will be released publicly.

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (11)

Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans

HHS develops the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americanswhich provides evidence-based advice on how physical activity can help promote health and reduce the risk of chronic disease. The second edition of the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans includes recommendations for Americans ages 3 years and over — including people at increased risk of chronic disease.

It is an essential resource for health professionals and policy makers and is used to inform federal physical activity programs and initiatives. The Move Your Way® campaign is the promotional campaign for the second edition of the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. It offers tools and resources for consumers and professionals to learn about the Physical Activity Guidelines and share its key messages.

Recognizing the importance of physical activity to promote health and help prevent chronic disease, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020-2025 recommends that Americans of all ages meet the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans.

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (12)

Applying Systems Science in the Dietary Guidelines

In response to recommendations from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM), a report was developed with potential options to integrate systems science approaches into the Dietary Guidelines development processes, including implementation.

The report, Applicability of Systems Science Approaches to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, leverages expertise from a diverse panel of systems science, nutrition, and health experts convened to discuss the topic. The report provides six action strategies for integrating systems science and highlights multiple opportunities across the nutrition landscape for how systems science could improve the implementation and impact of the Dietary Guidelines in achieving its public health goal of disease prevention and health promotion.

View the report and potential action strategies, including some already under way:

  • Systems Science Report Summary
  • Systems Science Full Report
Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (13)

National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine Study: Process to Update the Dietary Guidelines

As directed by Congress, USDA commissioned the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine to conduct independent studies on the process used to develop the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which culminated in several reports for consideration by HHS and USDA as they continue to strengthen and evolve the process.

  • Learn more about these studies and see the Departments’ activities and responses.
Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans (2024)

FAQs

Related Projects | Dietary Guidelines for Americans? ›

Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs) is a generic term for a set of nutrient reference values that includes the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA), Adequate Intake (AI), Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL), and Estimated Average Requirement (EAR).

What are the DRI standards? ›

Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs) is a generic term for a set of nutrient reference values that includes the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA), Adequate Intake (AI), Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL), and Estimated Average Requirement (EAR).

Who are the American guidelines intended for? ›

The Dietary Guidelines for Americans provides advice on what to eat and drink to meet nutrient needs, promote health, and prevent disease. It is developed and written for a professional audience, including policymakers, healthcare providers, nutrition educators, and Federal nutrition program operators.

How to reference Dietary Guidelines for Americans? ›

Q: How do I cite the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020-2025? A: Suggested citation: U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020-2025. 9th Edition.

What is an example of dietary recommendations? ›

Every day eat five or more servings of a combination of vegetables and fruits, especially green and yellow vegetables and citrus fruits. Also, increase intake of starches and other complex carbohydrates by eating six or more daily servings of a combination of breads, cereals, and legumes.

What is the difference between DRI and DGA? ›

While the DGAs focus on healthy meal patterns, the DRIs generally focus on one or more specific nutrients, such as calories or sodium.

What is the purpose of Dietary Guidelines? ›

The purpose of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans is to provide advice on what to eat and drink to build a healthy diet that can promote healthy growth and development, help prevent diet-related chronic disease, and meet nutrient needs.

What does the USDA recommend? ›

It's important to eat a variety of fruits, vegetables, grains, protein foods, and dairy and fortified soy alternatives.

What does the Dietary Guidelines for Americans emphasize? ›

The Dietary Guidelines focuses on the combination of foods and beverages that make up an individual's whole diet over time, and not single foods or eating occasions in isolation. Research shows that the ongoing pattern of an individual's eating habits has the greatest impact on their health.

Who writes Dietary Guidelines for Americans? ›

Who's Involved in Updating the Dietary Guidelines. The Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services update and release the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. It was first released in 1980, and is mandated to be released every five years under the 1990 National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Act.

What is a sentence for Dietary Guidelines for Americans? ›

The Dietary Guidelines helps all Americans choose healthy eating patterns — and it's a key resource for policymakers and health professionals.

Which of the following are key recommendations of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans? ›

To meet the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, choose a diet with most of the calories from grain products, vegetables, fruits, lowfat milk products, lean meats, fish, poultry, and dry beans. Choose fewer calories from fats and sweets.

What are the five nutrients of concern for Americans? ›

Current Dietary Guidelines

Calcium, potassium, dietary fiber, and vitamin D are considered dietary components of public health concern for the general U.S. population. In addition, iron is a nutrient of public health concern for infants, particularly those receiving mostly human milk, and women of childbearing age.

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