Amy Gandon
amygandon.bsky.social
Amy Gandon
@amygandon.bsky.social
Big fan of big ideas about big issues. Mostly public services, civil service and civic governance.

Ex-Cabinet Office, DHSC and RSA. Now freelance.
Put simply: you can’t tweak your way out of a crisis - whether that’s the nation’s obesity crisis, or its search for political renewal and national confidence.

Read 'It Takes A Village' here for some other ideas:
www.ippr.org/articles/it-...
It takes a village: Empowering families and communities to improve children's health | IPPR
Improving children’s health has been a priority for decades. Yet, despite billions of pounds of investment and countless initiatives, outcomes are stagnati
www.ippr.org
November 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Is it lack of bandwidth, so only ready-made answers feel within reach?

Is it a lack of capability, with too little talent - or too little direction - to generate imaginative new ideas?

Or simply a lack of courage to break out of the 2010s policy groundhog day we seem stuck in?
November 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Ultimately, this raises broader qus about the Government’s policy-making habits.

What I’m calling “tweakonomics” has been the dominant MO for the past 18 months, impressing neither voters in the ST nor delivering the long-term transformation the country needs (and was promised).
November 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
In It Takes A Village, we argue for a much broader tax on sugar and salt.

But equally the new Lancet evidence released last week on ultra-processed foods could point to the potential for a radical new levy designed along those lines too.
November 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Which - for me - raises the real question: why reach for a small tweak to the Soft Drinks Industry Levy - a brilliant policy, yes, but conceived nearly a decade ago - instead of designing the next-generation answer to it?
November 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Extending SDIL to milk-based drinks has been in the Whitehall drawer for years.

It was on the list of “ready-to-go” (i.e. politically safe, long advocated by the public health lobby) measures when I was health lead in the Cabinet Office in 2020.
November 25, 2025 at 8:49 PM
One big reason: policy has been too incremental - behind the curve of seismic shifts in how food is produced, marketed and consumed.

Think the explosion of UPFs, fewer families eating together, more eating in front of screens, and the surge in takeaways and out-of-home food.
November 25, 2025 at 8:49 PM
But… we also argued that much of the UK’s policy on diet, weight and nutrition has amounted to 'tinkering at the edges.'

Despite millions spent and several rounds of politically costly regulatory reform, the latest data shows the *highest ever* rates of obesity among 4+5 yos.
November 25, 2025 at 8:48 PM
This speaks directly to parents’ concerns about the accessibility and affordability of healthy food, versus the ubiquity - and often pernicious marketing - of unhealthy options.
November 25, 2025 at 8:48 PM
Unsurprisingly, I quite agree! Thanks for your feedback Kate, much appreciated.
November 24, 2025 at 9:30 AM
For the full report - and appendices 🤓 - see here: ippr.org/articles/it-...

Comment, DM or email with your thoughts. I'd love to hear your reflections.

/ENDS
It takes a village: Empowering families and communities to improve children's health | IPPR
Improving children’s health has been a priority for decades. Yet, despite billions of pounds of investment and countless initiatives, outcomes are stagnati
ippr.org
November 24, 2025 at 9:21 AM
🏛️ And critically, they wanted government to back them up in tackling the wider forces - social media and technology, unhealthy food environments and work pressures - that no family could tackle alone.

Handy infographic for clarified roles in a new social contract below:
November 24, 2025 at 9:20 AM
6/ 👥 Finally, parents were strikingly aligned in what they wanted from services and policy alike:

🤝 more personal, human relationships with practitioners
🏡 more informal, low-pressure spaces for support
📘 clearer, easier to access info and better preparation for parenthood
November 24, 2025 at 9:20 AM
1 in 3 had not received any antenatal education - increasing to 2 in 5 of the least financially secure - and 85% agreed that they learnt 'as you go along' rather than through any structured support.
November 24, 2025 at 9:20 AM
5/ 🏋️‍♂️ Parents felt significant responsibility and influence over their children's health, but were struck by how little preparation or support they received in performing this critical role.
November 24, 2025 at 9:19 AM
This may reflect younger parents' greater immersion in the digital world, or else the reality of becoming parents when the NHS can no longer be relied upon for timely support.
November 24, 2025 at 9:19 AM
4/ 📱 In this context, the online world is playing an increasingly central - and confusing - role in health advice.

Parents under 35 were twice as likely to list social media and online forums among their top trusted sources of guidance as those over 45.
November 24, 2025 at 9:19 AM
Parents were clearly shouldering more of the burden in response to clear strain within the NHS, with parents describing rushed or transactional interactions, turning to costly private care or cobbling together their own 'DIY' solutions for their children's health issues.
November 24, 2025 at 9:18 AM
3/ 🚧 They also described growing barriers to that ideal – from the cost of healthy food and activities to pressures from work, new technology and overstretched public services.
November 24, 2025 at 9:18 AM
2/ 🌱 Parents’ defined a healthy childhood holistically.

They wanted their children to feel safe, loved and free to be themselves, with varied, active experiences compared to the screen-based childhoods they feared were becoming the norm.

Meanwhile health services barely featured.
November 24, 2025 at 9:17 AM