Strategic Training Initiative for the Prevention of Eating Disorders (STRIPED)
Our initiative is a public health incubator, designed to cultivate novel insights and strategies for prevention. We introduce trainees to a rich array of disciplinary perspectives, methodologies, and theories and provide them with opportunities to join crosscutting collaborative teams.
About the Playbook
There’s an unspoken assumption among most scientists: If we work really hard and accrue enough evidence about a public health problem or a health inequity, that will lead to policy change, and in turn communities will be healthier because of our efforts. The assumption seems to be that our evidence is linked to policy change through some direct and unmediated pathway. But what is this mysterious pathway? Osmosis? Magic? Sheer brilliance? It’s tempting to say it’s the latter, but alas, reality is more complicated.
I’m going to let you in on a secret, though. The pathway isn’t really that mysterious if you think of it as an arc, an evidence-to-policy translation arc that we can learn to navigate along its three essential steps:
- accrue compelling evidence
- generate viable policy options
- energize political will to galvanize lawmakers and communities around one or more of those options
While this unspoken assumption about how policy change happens may be the norm among scientists generally, there are some notable exceptions. Tobacco control is a shining example. As a field, it has done exceptionally well in the realm of policy translation, laser-focused on all steps on the arc to catalyze meaningful policy changes. Think of indoor smoking bans, age restrictions, and sales taxes, all of which have become the law of the land and are saving countless lives.
Those of us who work in eating disorders prevention have been working hard for a few decades now. Many successes have been logged, yet scaling up prevention for the benefit of whole communities and society most often requires changing policies. Our field is a relative newcomer to strategies for connecting evidence to policy. Recognizing this as an aspect of the field in need of growth, STRIPED and our team of collaborators and trainees have dedicated our work year in and year out to charting a new path along the policy translation arc. Our goal: to accrue compelling evidence, craft viable policy options, and energize political will around the issues that we care about most and that are well-documented to contribute to a crisis of body image among young people.
We started with over-the-counter diet pills and weight-loss supplements, predatory products that are hardly regulated, often dangerous, yet are sold to children across the country every day. Then we expanded our portfolio to include initiatives to ban weight discrimination, incentivize businesses to use realistic advertising images of people of all sizes, shapes, and skin shades, and more. We are joining forces with like-minded people across disciplines, such as law and economics, and across sectors, including community advocates, lawmakers, and businesses.
We have learned a lot over the years about bringing together science, policy, and community to forge powerful collaborative campaigns for policy change and health equity. We are committed to sharing all that we’ve learned with you—fellow public health professionals, community advocates, and policymakers alike—and are thrilled at the release of our STRIPED Advocacy Playbook. Culling the best ideas and experience from over the years, our Playbook offers a step-by-step guide to connecting evidence to policy change. We are proud that our Playbook showcases the trailblazing work of our talented colleagues:
- My Power People, led by Lori Fresina, creator of the Power Prism®
- Center Road Solutions, led by Katrina Velasquez, crafter of our slate of model legislation
- 1235 Strategies, led by Leslie Kerns, and the team at GQR, orchestrators of our message testing for the model legislation
With their contributions and those of many others on our team and our generous supporters, we are pleased to make the STRIPED Advocacy Playbook freely available through our website. If you have a passion for health equity and a vision of a world where young people of all genders can grow up at home in their own bodies, then roll up your sleeves, and let’s get started.
Based at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Boston Children’s Hospital, the Strategic Training Initiative for the Prevention of Eating Disorders (STRIPED) launched in 2009 to train health professionals in eating disorder prevention. We use public policy and advocacy as critical tools to change the world in which we raise our children. We strive to create a society where girls, boys, and people of all genders can grow up at home in their own bodies. While we cannot legislate good health, we can change laws in ways that increase a child’s ability to grow up with a healthy body image and without an eating disorder.
In addition to this STRIPED Advocacy Playbook, these other STRIPED
resources may be helpful as well.
Thank you to the collaborating organizations for the STRIPED Advocacy Playbook!
Thank you to our generous funders who helped make the Playbook possible!
Ellen Feldberg Gordon
Denise and Daniel Hamburger
Anonymous
Thank you to all the individuals and organizations who helped make the Playbook possible!
S. Bryn Austin
Kerry Donohue
Katelyn Ferreira
Deepa Manjanatha
Julie Meute
Madeline Olsen
Amanda Raffoul
Marlena Skrabak
Julia Vitagliano
The Academy for Eating Disorders (AED) created and compiled approximately 24 hours of free evidence-based educational videos from around the world. To support AED’s and World Eating Disorders Action Day’s efforts, the STRIPED Youth Corps created a video on the STRIPED Advocacy Playbook. Check out their video below.
See our Glossary of Terms.
On February 24, 2021, celebrated author and founder of Alliance for Eating Disorders Awareness Johanna Kandel, and varsity swimmer, award-winning transgender rights activist, and eating disorders advocate Schuyler Bailar, joined STRIPED for an inspiring Facebook Live discussion about eating disorders advocacy. Check out the video below.