Time for nutrition in medical education
Aim To synthesise a selection of UK medical students’ and doctors’ views surrounding nutrition in medical education and practice.Methods Information was gathered from surveys of medical students and doctors identified between 2015 and 2018 and an evaluation of nutrition teaching in a single UK medic...
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2020-07-01
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doaj-796ea94db4ee44c8945d7986d81f4c972020-11-25T03:59:03ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health2516-55422020-07-013110.1136/bmjnph-2019-000049Time for nutrition in medical educationKathy Martyn0Elaine MacAninch1Rajna Golubic2Ally Jaffee3Sumantra Ray4Luke Buckner5Preya Amin6Iain Broadley7Dominic Crocombe8Duleni Herath9Harrison Carter10Minha Rajput-Ray112 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 1 Nutrition and Dietetics, Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust, Brighton, UK 2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 1 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 1 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK 2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UK2 NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health, St John’s Innovation Centre, Cambridge, UKAim To synthesise a selection of UK medical students’ and doctors’ views surrounding nutrition in medical education and practice.Methods Information was gathered from surveys of medical students and doctors identified between 2015 and 2018 and an evaluation of nutrition teaching in a single UK medical school. Comparative analysis of the findings was undertaken to answer three questions: the perceived importance of nutrition in medical education and practice, adequacy of nutrition training, and confidence in current nutrition knowledge and skills.Results We pooled five heterogeneous sources of information, representing 853 participants. Most agreed on the importance of nutrition in health (>90%) and in a doctor’s role in nutritional care (>95%). However, there was less desire for more nutrition education in doctors (85%) and in medical students (68%). Most felt their nutrition training was inadequate, with >70% reporting less than 2 hours. There was a preference for face-to-face rather than online training. At one medical school, nutrition was included in only one module, but this increased to eight modules following an increased nutrition focus. When medical students were asked about confidence in their nutrition knowledge and on advising patients, there was an even split between agree and disagree (p=0.869 and p=0.167, respectively), yet few were confident in the UK dietary guidelines. Only 26% of doctors were confident in their nutrition knowledge and 74% gave nutritional advice less than once a month, citing lack of knowledge (75%), time (64%) and confidence (62%) as the main barriers. There was some recognition of the importance of a collaborative approach, yet 28% of doctors preferred to get specialist advice rather than address nutrition themselves.Conclusion There is a desire and a need for more nutrition within medical education, as well as a need for greater clarity of a doctor’s role in nutritional care and when to refer for specialist advice. Despite potential selection bias and limitations in the sampling frame, this synthesis provides a multifaceted snapshot via a large number of insights from different levels of training through medical students to doctors from which further research can be developed.https://nutrition.bmj.com/content/3/1/40.full |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kathy Martyn Elaine MacAninch Rajna Golubic Ally Jaffee Sumantra Ray Luke Buckner Preya Amin Iain Broadley Dominic Crocombe Duleni Herath Harrison Carter Minha Rajput-Ray |
spellingShingle |
Kathy Martyn Elaine MacAninch Rajna Golubic Ally Jaffee Sumantra Ray Luke Buckner Preya Amin Iain Broadley Dominic Crocombe Duleni Herath Harrison Carter Minha Rajput-Ray Time for nutrition in medical education BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health |
author_facet |
Kathy Martyn Elaine MacAninch Rajna Golubic Ally Jaffee Sumantra Ray Luke Buckner Preya Amin Iain Broadley Dominic Crocombe Duleni Herath Harrison Carter Minha Rajput-Ray |
author_sort |
Kathy Martyn |
title |
Time for nutrition in medical education |
title_short |
Time for nutrition in medical education |
title_full |
Time for nutrition in medical education |
title_fullStr |
Time for nutrition in medical education |
title_full_unstemmed |
Time for nutrition in medical education |
title_sort |
time for nutrition in medical education |
publisher |
BMJ Publishing Group |
series |
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health |
issn |
2516-5542 |
publishDate |
2020-07-01 |
description |
Aim To synthesise a selection of UK medical students’ and doctors’ views surrounding nutrition in medical education and practice.Methods Information was gathered from surveys of medical students and doctors identified between 2015 and 2018 and an evaluation of nutrition teaching in a single UK medical school. Comparative analysis of the findings was undertaken to answer three questions: the perceived importance of nutrition in medical education and practice, adequacy of nutrition training, and confidence in current nutrition knowledge and skills.Results We pooled five heterogeneous sources of information, representing 853 participants. Most agreed on the importance of nutrition in health (>90%) and in a doctor’s role in nutritional care (>95%). However, there was less desire for more nutrition education in doctors (85%) and in medical students (68%). Most felt their nutrition training was inadequate, with >70% reporting less than 2 hours. There was a preference for face-to-face rather than online training. At one medical school, nutrition was included in only one module, but this increased to eight modules following an increased nutrition focus. When medical students were asked about confidence in their nutrition knowledge and on advising patients, there was an even split between agree and disagree (p=0.869 and p=0.167, respectively), yet few were confident in the UK dietary guidelines. Only 26% of doctors were confident in their nutrition knowledge and 74% gave nutritional advice less than once a month, citing lack of knowledge (75%), time (64%) and confidence (62%) as the main barriers. There was some recognition of the importance of a collaborative approach, yet 28% of doctors preferred to get specialist advice rather than address nutrition themselves.Conclusion There is a desire and a need for more nutrition within medical education, as well as a need for greater clarity of a doctor’s role in nutritional care and when to refer for specialist advice. Despite potential selection bias and limitations in the sampling frame, this synthesis provides a multifaceted snapshot via a large number of insights from different levels of training through medical students to doctors from which further research can be developed. |
url |
https://nutrition.bmj.com/content/3/1/40.full |
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