Organised by The Royal Society of Medicine
Web URL: Register for this event here
Start Date: 10 October 2012
End Date: 10 October 2012
Duration One day
Location London
Venue Royal Society of Medicine, 1 Wimpole Street, LONDON, W1G 0AE
Follow varying nutritional needs, stage by stage through the lifecycle: preconception to infancy, childhood and puberty, performance and adulthood into later life. Note the basic differences between demands of body and brain. Look for ways of generating lifecycle health.
Objective is to raise the questions:
1. How, at each stage of life, do the prime nutrients or deficits affect, brain, body, and childbearing?
2. Can a more Homo-specific food-chain curtail the modern nutrition-related pandemics?
3. To what extent are epigenetic effects transgenerational?
4. How can each age-group learn the means of lifecycle health?
5. What environmental and ecological factors affect physical, mental and social health? What global provision is needed?
Audience: For healthcare practitioners, consultants and scientists; stakeholders in food, agriculture and medicines; academics and students in nutrition, health and fertility.
Programme:
9.30am - Registration, tea and coffee
10.00am - Welcome and introduction - Note evaluation sheets
Dr David Smallbone, New York Academy of Sciences, Faculty of Homoeopathy, Fellow of the College of Healing
Chair: Dr Elizabeth Foot, VP Personalised medicine, London Genetics International
10.10am - Preconception care: Nutritional and health status of both parents
Dr Marilyn Glenville, Naturalhealthpractice.com
10.40am - Foetal life: Death starts in the womb
Professor Michael A Crawford, FRCPath Imperial, Founder-Director Inst Brain Chem and Hum Nutrition
11.10am - Refreshments
11.30am - Infancy: Maternal nutrition, weaning and establishing individual nutrition
Professor Gary Frost, Chair in Nutrition and Diabetics, Imperial College, London
Chair: Dr David Smallbone
12.00pm - Childhood: Maintaining good nutrition for mental and behavioural development
Dr Alex Richardson, Oxford, Food and Behaviour Research
12.30pm - Adolescence: Preparing for adulthood - good nutritional practice
Dr Bernard Gesch FRSA, Oxford Senior Scientist, Dept Physiology, Anatomy, Genetics
1.00pm - Lifecycle health: Co-ordinating insights for healthy generations
Morning speakers' discussion panel
1.20pm - Lunch
Chair: Mr James Collins, Director, Performance Nutrition Ltd, Lead Nutritionist, Arsenal Football Club, British Judo
2.20pm - Performance: Sports nutrition - the science to make your life a great one
Mr Matt Lovell, Nutrition Consultant to the English Rugby Team
2.50pm - Educating children as progenitors of long-life health
Mr Simon H House, Chair, McCarrison Society for Nutrition and Health
3.20pm - Converging insights: In sustaining health and performance
Afternoon speakers' discussion panel
3.40 pm - Conclusion of conference: Evaluation forms
Dr David Smallbone
3.50 pm - Close