Release No. 0076.96 Backgrounder THIRD REPORT ON NUTRITION MONITORING IN THE UNITED STATES Congressional Mandate The U.S. Congress has defined nutrition monitoring and related research as "the set of activities necessary to provide timely information about the role and status of factors that bear on the contribution that nutrition makes to the health of the people of the United States." The National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Program (NNMRRP) was established by Congress in the National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-445). In that legislation, Congress directed the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to share responsibility for implementing the program and to "contract with a scientific body, such as the National Academy of Sciences or the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, to interpret available data analyses, and publish...a report on the dietary, nutritional, and health-related status of the people of the United States and the nutritional quality (including the nutritive and nonnutritive content) of food consumed in the United States...at least once every five years." Report Preparation The Third Report on Nutrition Monitoring in the United States (TRONM) was prepared by the Life Sciences Research Office (LSRO) of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) under contract with USDA and under the joint leadership of HHS and USDA. The first report, Nutrition Monitoring in the United States: A Progress Report from the Joint Nutrition Monitoring Evaluation Committee, written by HHS and USDA in 1986, and the second report, Nutrition Monitoring in the United States: An Update Report on Nutrition Monitoring, prepared by LSRO in 1989, summarized nutrition monitoring information from the National Nutrition Monitoring System, the NNMRRP's predecessor. LSRO prepared the TRONM with the assistance of expert consultants with specialities in dietary intake and food consumption patterns, food composition and analysis, public health nutrition, community nutrition, clinical nutrition, nutrition monitoring and surveillance research, behavioral aspects of the interrelationships of nutrition and health, agricultural economics, and statistics and biostatistics. The data for the TRONM came from surveys and surveillance systems in the interconnected Federal and State activities that are part of the NNMRRP. Content Major components of the NNMRRP discussed in the TRONM include: o nutritional status and nutrition-related health measurements; o food and nutrient consumption; o knowledge, attitudes, and behavior assessments; o food composition and nutrient data bases; and o food supply determinations. Report Highlights o Americans are slowly changing their eating patterns toward more healthful diets, but a considerable gap remains between public health recommendations and consumers' practices. o About one-third of adults and one-fifth of adolescents in the United States are overweight. These results represent increases in the prevalence of overweight since the 1970's. o Despite significant progress, 20 percent of Americans still have high serum cholesterol levels. o Hypertension remains a major public health problem in middle-aged and elderly people. Non-Hispanic blacks have a higher age-adjusted prevalence of hypertension than non-Hispanic whites and Mexican Americans. o Many Americans are not getting the calcium they need to maintain optimal bone health and prevent age-related bone loss, particularly adolescents, adult females, elderly people and non-Hispanic black males. o Less than one-third of American adults meet the recommendation to consume five or more servings of fruits and vegetables per day. o While the availability of food, on a per capita basis, is generally adequate to prevent undernutrition and deficiency-related diseases, the data show some Americans report not always getting enough to eat. Approximately one in 10 people living in low-income households or families experience some degree of food insufficiency. # NOTE: USDA news release and media advisories are available on the Internet. Access the USDA Home Page on the World Wide Web at http://www.usda.gov