Bridgetown, Barbados, 15 November 2024. The Healthy Caribbean Coalition (HCC) in partnership with the Caribbean Broadcasting Union (CBU) recently engaged media professionals from around the region in the healthy nutrition food policy space. It’s part of the partnership between the two regional entities to encourage more and better quality of one of the key issues affecting Caribbean people.
For the past two years HCC has sponsored themed categories in print and television in the CBU’s Media Awards. The goal of the recent sensitization event was to strengthen understanding of healthy nutrition food policy across the Caribbean through engagement with news teams, media managers and other communication professionals. The objectives included sensitizing senior media practitioners on issues related to healthy nutrition food policy; identifying how the lives of individuals get better with healthy nutrition food policy and encouraging media practitioners to engage more with healthy nutrition food policy content.
Attendees at the virtual session had the opportunity to find out more about the HCC themed category ahead of the upcoming 36th CBU Media Awards (CMA), which will be presented in Barbados next August.
CBU Secretary General, Sonia Gill advised attendees that the Call for Entries will be issued in the coming weeks and emphasised the tremendous value of the partnership between the HCC and CBU. She noted that the HCC had taken the initiative to provide bursaries this year to both winners of the CMA Healthy Nutrition Food Policy categories, to assist reporters and producers in further expanding on their work in the area.
HCCs Communication Officer Mrs. Sheena Warner-Edwards identified the policies which guided the criteria for the themed categories and identified how food policies lay the foundation for a supportive environment to allow individuals to achieve better health and wellness. She also identified key resources that can be utilized by the media in content creation including the childhood obesity portal, found on the HCCs website, www.healthycaribbean.org.
HCCs Executive Director Mrs. Maisha Hutton, provided insight into the effects of commercial determinants of health on policymaking and how conflicts of interest could arise.
Ms. Naledi Sikhakhane, a journalist based in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa, who writes for Daily Maverick, provided tremendous insights into investigative and solutions journalism on food justice food security and nutrition, cost of living, food industry regulations, land, agriculture, and other interlinked themes that speak to access to food, nutrition and health as a basis of realising social justice.
The audience was kept engaged by Moderator Mr. Amitabh Sharma, the print Op-Ed Editor of CBU Member, the RJRGLEANER Communications Group.
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