Abstract
BackgroundSignificant research, regulatory bodies and even governmental resolutions have identified meaningful nutrition education for medical and other healthcare professionals as a priority. Doctors are well placed to provide nutrition care, yet nutrition education in medicine remains inadequate regardless of country, setting, or year of training. There remains a need to establish an accepted benchmark on nutrition competencies for medicine, as without consensus standards there is little likelihood of uniform adoption.ObjectiveThis study aimed to establish consensus on nutrition competencies using a Delphi process to inform a framework for nutrition education in medicine.MethodsA three-round modified online Delphi survey of experts in healthcare practice, education and training, and experts by experience (service users) was conducted to provide a comprehensive consensus on nutrition competencies for medical practice.ResultsFifty-two experts (15.1% response rate) participated in Round 1, 42 completed Round 2 and 47 completed Round 3. Participants included medical professionals, dietitians, academics working in health professions education and policymakers from Australia, New Zealand, the UK and Northern Ireland. Twenty-seven service users (57.5% response rate) completed the Round 1 questionnaire, 19 completed Round 2 and 16 completed Round 3. By consensus, 25 nutrition competencies for medicine were defined. The service user panel identified an additional seven skills and attributes considered important in the receipt of nutrition care. Competencies that achieved consensus broadly fell into themes of team-based care, communication, professionalism (eg, attributes) and health promotion and disease prevention. This informs broad skills that may be taught in a nutrition context but could be included in other domains.ConclusionsThe findings suggest doctors need the knowledge and skills to consider the findings from nutrition screening and assessment, coordinate nutrition care when an individual may benefit from further assessment or intervention and provide support for advice delivered by other experts as part of a multidisciplinary approach.
Reference40 articles.
1. National preventive health strategy 2021-2030. Canberra Department of Health; 2021.
2. Department of Health . Annual medicare statistics: financial year 1984-85 to 2020-21. Canberra DoH; 2021.
3. Dietetic staffing and workforce capacity planning in primary health care;MacDonald Werstuck;Can J Diet Pract Res,2018
4. Nutritional status in older persons according to healthcare setting: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prevalence data using MNA®;Cereda;Clin Nutr,2016
5. Nutrition in medical education: a systematic review;Crowley;Lancet Planet Health,2019
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献