The Jean Mayer Prize - Champions in Nutrition Policy

In October 2018, the Friedman School and John Hancock honored Tom Harkin, Tom Vilsack, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, and Mission: Readiness for their work in improving healthy food choices. We also took time to celebrate and reflect on the 40th anniversary of the formation of the Friedman School.

Long before Jean Mayer became the tenth president of Tufts University in 1976, he was a war hero. He fought with French forces in the battle of Dunkirk. After one skirmish with German soldiers, he had to walk several days with a bullet in his foot, leaving him with a permanent limp.

So it’s no wonder that when Mayer decided to take on the challenge of creating the first school of nutrition in the country, he did it with determination.

Mayer was a brilliant bench scientist, said Dariush Mozaffarian, dean of the Friedman School, but he knew that nutrition is also about behavior, economics, and policy.

“He really understood translating science into action,” Mozaffarian said. “That really to this day defines the Friedman School.”

The Jean Mayer Prize is a new biennial award, supported through a gift to the Friedman School from John Hancock, to recognize outstanding achievement and work in science and/or policy related to food and nutrition.

On October 18, the Friedman School celebrated forty years of the university turning science into action by presenting the inaugural Jean Mayer Prize for Excellence in Nutrition Science and Policy to two people and two organizations that have embodied Mayer’s unwavering pursuit of a healthier world.

The Jean Mayer Prize is a new biennial award, supported through a gift to the Friedman School from John Hancock, to recognize outstanding achievement and work in science and/or policy related to food and nutrition. Named for the 10th president of Tufts University and a leading nutrition scientist, the award honors leaders who continue Jean Mayer's legacy of advocating for policies and programs to reduce hunger and poor nutrition and to improve diet quality for all.

The $100,000 prize, sponsored by John Hancock, went to retired U.S. Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa; former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack; the consumer advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI); and the nonpartisan policy group Mission: Readiness. Harkin and Vilsack asked that their shares of the award be given directly to charities they designated.

Creating a Healthier Food Environment

Margo Wootan of CSPI gives remarks during the Jean Mayer Prize event.

All the recipients worked to pass the Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act, a 2010 federal law that revamped the standards for the national school lunch and breakfast programs and increased access to healthy food for low-income children.

CSPI president Peter Lurie and Margo Wootan, its vice president for nutrition, accepted the award for their organization. Wootan said that the group spent fifteen years laying the groundwork for the law’s passage by gathering sponsors and diffusing opposition from the food and beverage industry. “But in the end thirty million children have healthier school lunches with more fruits and vegetables and soda, snack cakes, and candy bars are out of schools,” she said.

“Healthy eating today is like trudging through deep snow,” she said. “What we at CSPI do is to try to clear a path for people, to not only make it easier to eat well, but actually to make it possible to navigate this obesogenic food environment.”

Tom Vilsack gives remarks during the Jean Mayer Prize event

In accepting his award, Vilsack said that he and Mozaffarian have discussed how helping Americans eat healthier would bring down health care costs, leaving much more money in the budget to fund education, defense, and other priorities.

“The power is in us, but we have to be led, we have to be directed, we have to be educated,” Vilsack told faculty and students at the Friedman School. “We have to know how to do that. That’s what the science is all about. It’s giving us the road map. It’s giving us the directions. It’s making it easier for us to understand.”

Jean Mayer Prize recipients from Mission: Readiness with Friedman Dean Dariush Mozaffarian and John Hancock CEO Brooks Tingle

Rear Admiral James A. Barnett and Brigadier General Allyson Solomon accepted the award for Mission: Readiness, a group of 750 retired military leaders who have warned that obesity and malnutrition have decreased the pool of healthy recruits for American armed forces. Mission: Readiness’s most recent report on the issue, released in late 2018, is called “Unhealthy and Unprepared.”

“Obesity really is the leading reason that young Americans are unable to serve,” Solomon said.  “The national security of this country depends on encouraging healthy lifestyles.”

Jean Mayer Prize recipient Tom Harkin speaks at the October 2018 event

Harkin said that he and the other awardees have had some success in making schools healthier. “However, it pains me to see some of that progress being halted with new regulations permitting more sugar, salt, and fewer whole grains in our school lunch program,” he said. “It’s up to us . . . to say that we’re not going to backslide on this progress that we have made toward a healthier nation.”

“Schools should be a sanctuary for our kids, not just another marketplace for hawking junk and sugary foods and drinks,” he said.

Story by Julie Flaherty, Senior Content Creator/Editor for Tufts Now

Celebrating 40 Years of the Friedman School in 2018

In 1978, the Tufts Nutrition Institute, precursor to the Tufts School of Nutrition, was formally established and interdisciplinary coursework began on the Medford campus of Tufts University.

From its first class of 17 students, the Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy has matured to a student body with over 250 students and an impressive alumni pool of over 2,100. We celebrated our 40th birthday in 2018 and made our founder Jean Mayer proud by awarding the Jean Mayer Prize (made possible by John Hancock Insurance) to four people and organizations whose work at the intersection of policy and science has helped to make the world a healthier place. Read more about the event and watch the videos online!

Take a journey through our school's history. We're proud of all we've achieved so far, and look forward to an even brighter future.