FoodSwitch EcoSwitch Food Policy

Food policy

Every year, more than 11 million people die from diet-related diseases, and billions more face food insecurity, malnutrition, or hunger.

The world needs a healthier, more sustainable and equitable food system grounded in education and awareness, backed by government regulation.

The George Institute’s Global Food Policy Program aims to make healthy food available for all and transform the food systems perpetuating ill health. With this, we can ensure healthy, sustainable food is affordable and accessible for everyone.
  • 11%

    of deaths linked to poor diet

  • 13M

    deaths due to excess sodium intake

  • 34%

    OF GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS due to the food system

  • 537million

    adults globally are living with diabetes

Food systems and environments shape what we eat, profoundly impacting our health. We focus on driving change in these areas through rigorous research and evidence-informed advocacy.

We run multiple projects globally to question how the world produces and consumes food and considers dietary health. The strategic goals of the Global Food Policy Programs are to:

  • Prevent millions of deaths from cardiovascular disease
  • Make healthy food accessible and affordable
  • Prevent unhealthy labelling and marketing
  • Empower consumers and bring transparency to the global food supply

Our work supports the development of clearer, more effective food and alcohol labelling policies and helps prevent harmful influences, such as unhealthy marketing. Our flagship FoodSwitch program, a database and app with nutrition and labelling information on around 1 million packaged foods, tracks changes in the healthiness of the food supply worldwide, while the newly launched ecoSwitch includes greenhouse gas emissions data.

As a WHO Collaborating Centre on Population Salt Reduction, we assist countries to reduce salt in food and switch to potassium-enriched salt, helping to prevent deaths from heart disease and stroke.

Adopting a holistic approach to nutrition, we address food insecurity through programs like Food is Medicine in Australia and develop sustainable solutions to combat malnutrition in communities across Australia and India.

Our Projects

Food policy

ecoSwitch App

Food policy

GlutenSwitch App

Food policy

Switching the world’s salt supply: Scaling up the use of potassium-enriched salt

Guunu-maana Food policy

Food and Water for Life: working with indigenous communities to improve food and water security

Food policy

Comprehensive workplace intervention for cancer prevention in China (WECAN)

Food policy

Revolutionising food choices in Mexico

Food policy

ChAracterize, RevIve, Support, Monitor and MAnage (CARISMMA) sustainable food systems study

Food policy

Produce Prescription: innovative ‘Food is Medicine’ intervention to improve health among people with type 2 diabetes

our impact in food policy

A school-based salt education programme in China has worked with families, teachers and health educators to raise awareness about the risks of excess salt consumption and encourage people to reduce salt use in cooking.

‘EduSaltS’ reduced salt consumption and blood pressure in family members of the primary school children involved and is the first large-scale salt education programme to show such significant results. The approach is now being piloted in districts in Beijing and serves as a model which could be scaled up in China and other countries to help tackle cardiovascular disease – the biggest global killer.

The programs in our Food Policy Division driving healthier diets and sustainable food systems globally:

New research shows alcohol industry drags feet on mandated pregnancy warning

Date published: News Type: Media release

The George Institute for Global Health India welcomes WHO's recommendation on potassium-enriched salt to combat hypertension

Date published: News Type: Media release

Misleading claims on alcohol no gift to Aussies this Christmas, study shows

Date published: News Type: Media release

Mandatory Health Star Ratings a must after 10 years of food industry inaction

Date published: News Type: Media release

Making it compulsory to reduce salt in foods could save thousands of lives

Date published: News Type: Media release

The George Institute for Global Health and Resolve to Save Lives welcome the WHO’s recommendation to replace regular table salt with lower-sodium salt substitutes

Date published: News Type: Media release
Food policy

Switching the world’s salt supply

Published date
Food policy

#SwitchTheSalt - If we ate less salt

Published date
Food policy

#SwitchTheSalt - Salt health harms

Published date
Cardiovascular health Food policy Brain health

Bitesize: What if we could switch the salt to reduce blood pressure?

Episode 26

Duration 15 mins - 30 mins

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Food policy

Bitesize: Why is eating less salt important for heart health

Episode 17

Duration 15 mins or less

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Food policy

#GeorgeTalks - Food is Medicine

Published date

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