Global Advances in Health and Medicine (Aug 2018)

Nutrition Education for the Health-care Provider Improves Patient Outcomes

  • Vanessa Baute MD,
  • Revathy Sampath-Kumar BS,
  • Sarah Nelson BS,
  • Barbara Basil BA

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2164956118795995
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Nutrition education is globally lacking in medical training, despite the fact that dietary habits are a crucial component of physician self-care, disease prevention, and treatment. Research has shown that a physician’s health status directly affects the quality of their preventative health counseling and patient outcomes, yet on average less than 20 hours over 4 years of medical education is spent teaching nutrition. This leaves providers with a gap in knowledge regarding this critical component of health. In a recent study, only 14% of resident physicians reported being adequately trained to provide nutritional counseling. Educating health-care professionals on how to eat well provides an opportunity to improve physician and patient well-being.