NESI Spotlight – Allie Reimold, PhD

Dr. Reimold is a Behavioral Scientist who earned her PhD in Health Behavior with a focus in Nutrition from the University of North Carolina Gilling’s School of Global Public Health. She is currently a Postdoctoral Scholar at the University of California, Davis and her research focuses on designing and evaluating retail and restaurant food policies that aim to prevent chronic disease and improve environmental sustainability. In this work, Dr. Reimold uses quasi-experimental evaluations of real-world policies, clinical trials, nationally representative surveys, and in-depth interviews, to understand how policies impact the availability and purchase of products associated with chronic disease, including food, tobacco, and alcohol.

How do you explain your current research/job to friends and family?

I evaluate and design food policies that aim to make it easier for communities to make healthy and environmentally friendly choices.

What is a paper you recently published? What excited you about the question you answered?

I recently published, “Impacts of a Healthy Checkout Ordinance on Added Sugars, Sodium, and Other Nutrients at Checkout 1 Year After Implementation: Berkeley, California, 2021-2022,” in the American Journal of Public Health. This paper evaluates the Berkeley, California Healthy Checkout Ordinance, the first policy in the world to set nutrition standards for the foods and beverages displayed at retail checkout areas. In this paper, I found that 1 year after policy implementation, there was significantly less added sugar, saturated fat, and calories, and significantly more fiber per serving of food and beverage available at checkout. These findings provide evidence that healthy checkout policies are a viable option for improving the healthfulness of food environments and were used to inform the passage of an additional healthy checkout policy in Contra Costa County, California in 2025

How do you envision your research impacting public health policies or practices? (What recommendations do you have for others hoping to translate their research into policy or practice?)

Given that my research is focused on evaluating and designing food policies, a major goal of my work is to translate research findings into real-world policy and practice. In my experience, 1) Building relationships with policymakers, practitioners, nonprofit organizations, and other researchers can help facilitate translational efforts; 2) Engaging stakeholders early helps ensure that research addresses real policy needs; 3) Prioritizing concise, plain-language summaries that highlight policy implications can be applied quickly when policy windows open; and 4) Leveraging existing networks, such as university platforms and professional organizations, can magnify the audience you’re able to reach.

Interested in learning more about Dr. Reimold’s work? Check out her Google Scholar page.