Assessing nutrition literacy and nutrition counseling proficiency following an interdisciplinary culinary medicine elective.

IF 1.4 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Anna N Kirby, Joy DeBellis, Katie Wolter, Gary Mount, Chih-Hsuan Wang, Jonathan Bishop, Jessica Barkhouse, Kathryn Wirth, Nancy Nguyen, Christopher Cacciatore, Kristyn Kraus
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Context: Culinary medicine (CM) is a growing field of education that aims to bridge the gap between the clinical need for nutritional counseling and the lack of education on the topic. Healthcare professionals can aid in nutrition-related noncommunicable disease (NCD) prevention by improving a patient's dietary behavior. However, the presence of nutrition education in healthcare curricula is lacking. Early evidence indicates that CM could address this gap.

Objectives: The objectives of this study are to determine if the provision of an interdisciplinary CM elective will improve student knowledge and confidence with counseling on nutrition and culinary principles, and to improve personal dietary habits of students.

Methods: This was a one-group pretest-posttest quasi-experimental design. First- and second-year osteopathic medical students (OMS) and nurse practitioner students were recruited to participate in a CM elective via email. Participants were excluded if they were not in good academic standing at their respective institutions. Twelve individuals (n=8 medical; n=4 nursing) were enrolled in the course. Participants completed pre- and postcourse surveys to determine changes in nutrition literacy (Nutrition Literacy Assessment Instrument [NLit42]), nutrition counseling proficiency (Nutrition Survey for Family Practitioners), and dietary quality (Automated Self-Administered 24-h dietary assessment tool; ASA24®). A two-sided, paired t test was conducted to determine changes in outcome variables.

Results: All 12 participants completed the precourse assessments, and 8 participants completed the postcourse assessments. Culinary activity attendance was 94.5 %. Participants exhibited a statistically significant increase in their overall nutrition literacy scores after completing the CM elective (p=0.006). Literacy subcategories indicated that the improvement came from the participant's ability to understand household measurements (p=0.005) better. Increases in self-reported proficiency were observed for participants' confidence to counsel on nutrition and prevention/wellness (p=0.02) and macronutrients in health and food safety (p=0.01). No statistically significant changes in the personal dietary pattern or quality were observed.

Conclusions: The interdisciplinary CM elective improved nutrition literacy and some aspects of counseling proficiency. Although small shifts in dietary variables were observed, the elective did not statistically improve participants' dietary pattern. However, some changes that were observed may lead to clinically relevant outcomes if maintained long-term. These findings are encouraging. Implementing CM as an educational tool could improve healthcare practitioners' ability to understand and counsel patients on nutrition to prevent the nutrition-related NCDs.

在跨学科烹饪医学选修课后评估营养知识和营养咨询能力。
背景:烹饪医学(CM)是一个不断发展的教育领域,旨在弥补营养咨询的临床需求与相关教育缺乏之间的差距。医疗保健专业人员可以通过改善患者的饮食行为来帮助预防与营养相关的非传染性疾病(NCD)。然而,医疗保健课程中却缺乏营养教育。早期证据表明,中医学可以弥补这一不足:本研究的目的是确定开设跨学科中医选修课是否能提高学生对营养和烹饪原则咨询的了解和信心,并改善学生的个人饮食习惯:方法:这是一个单组前测后测的准实验设计。通过电子邮件招募一年级和二年级骨科医学生(OMS)和执业护士学生参加中医选修课。如果参与者在各自院校的学习成绩不佳,则将其排除在外。共有 12 人(医学专业 8 人;护理专业 4 人)参加了该课程。参与者完成了课程前和课程后的调查,以确定营养知识(营养知识评估工具 [NLit42])、营养咨询能力(家庭医生营养调查)和饮食质量(自动自控 24 小时饮食评估工具;ASA24®)的变化。对结果变量的变化进行了双侧配对 t 检验:所有 12 名参与者都完成了课程前评估,8 名参与者完成了课程后评估。烹饪活动出席率为 94.5%。参加者在完成烹饪选修课后,其营养素养总分有了统计学意义上的显著提高(P=0.006)。读写能力子类别表明,学员的提高来自于他们能够更好地理解家庭测量(p=0.005)。参与者在营养和预防/健康咨询方面的信心(p=0.02)以及健康和食品安全中的宏量营养素(p=0.01)方面的自我报告能力都有所提高。在个人膳食模式或质量方面没有观察到有统计学意义的变化:结论:跨学科中医选修课提高了学生的营养知识水平和某些方面的咨询能力。虽然在饮食变量方面观察到了微小的变化,但从统计学角度来看,选修课并没有改善参与者的饮食模式。不过,如果长期坚持,观察到的一些变化可能会带来临床相关的结果。这些发现令人鼓舞。将中医学作为一种教育工具来实施,可以提高医护人员对营养的理解能力和为患者提供营养咨询的能力,从而预防与营养相关的非传染性疾病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Osteopathic Medicine
Journal of Osteopathic Medicine Health Professions-Complementary and Manual Therapy
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
118
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