Department of Internal Medicine, Yale New Haven Hospital, 1450 Chapel Street, Private 220, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Department of Sociology, Stanford University, 450 Jane Stanford Way, Building 120, Room 160, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2021 May 17;21(1):280. doi: 10.1186/s12909-021-02702-y.
Poor-quality diet is associated with one in five deaths globally. In the United States, it is the leading cause of death, representing a bigger risk factor than even smoking. For many, education on a healthy diet comes from their physician. However, as few as 25% of medical schools currently offer a dedicated nutrition course. We hypothesized that an active learning, culinary nutrition experience for medical students would improve the quality of their diets and better equip them to counsel future patients on food and nutrition.
This was a prospective, interventional, uncontrolled, non-randomized, pilot study. Ten first-year medical students at the Wayne State University School of Medicine completed a 4-part, 8-h course in culinary-nutritional instruction and hands-on cooking. Online assessment surveys were completed immediately prior to, immediately following, and 2 months after the intervention. There was a 100% retention rate and 98.8% item-completion rate on the questionnaires. The primary outcome was changes in attitudes regarding counselling patients on a healthy diet. Secondary outcomes included changes in dietary habits and acquisition of culinary knowledge. Average within-person change between timepoints was determined using ordinary least squares fixed-effect models. Statistical significance was defined as P ≤ .05.
Participants felt better prepared to counsel patients on a healthy diet immediately post-intervention (coefficient = 2.8; 95% confidence interval: 1.6 to 4.0 points; P < .001) and 2 months later (2.2 [1.0, 3.4]; P = .002). Scores on the objective test of culinary knowledge increased immediately after (3.6 [2.4, 4.9]; P < .001) and 2 months after (1.6 [0.4, 2.9]; P = .01) the intervention. Two months post-intervention, participants reported that a higher percentage of their meals were homemade compared to pre-intervention (13.7 [2.1, 25.3]; P = .02).
An experiential culinary nutrition course may improve medical students' readiness to provide dietary counselling. Further research will be necessary to determine what effects such interventions may have on the quality of participants' own diets.
全球每五例死亡中就有一例与不良饮食有关。在美国,它是导致死亡的主要原因,其风险因素甚至超过吸烟。对于许多人来说,健康饮食方面的教育来自他们的医生。然而,目前只有 25%的医学院提供专门的营养课程。我们假设,为医学生提供积极学习、烹饪营养体验将改善他们的饮食质量,并使他们更好地为未来的患者提供有关食物和营养的建议。
这是一项前瞻性、干预性、非对照、非随机的初步研究。韦恩州立大学医学院的 10 名一年级医学生完成了为期 4 部分、共 8 小时的烹饪营养教学和实践烹饪课程。在干预前、干预后立即和 2 个月后进行在线评估调查。调查问卷的保留率为 100%,项目完成率为 98.8%。主要结果是改变对患者进行健康饮食咨询的态度。次要结果包括饮食习惯的改变和烹饪知识的获取。使用普通最小二乘固定效应模型确定每个时间点之间的平均个体变化。统计学意义定义为 P≤.05。
参与者在干预后立即(系数=2.8;95%置信区间:1.6 至 4.0 分;P<0.001)和 2 个月后(2.2 [1.0,3.4];P=0.002)更有信心为患者提供健康饮食咨询。烹饪知识的客观测试分数在干预后立即(3.6 [2.4,4.9];P<0.001)和 2 个月后(1.6 [0.4,2.9];P=0.01)增加。干预后 2 个月,与干预前相比,参与者报告称他们食用的餐点有更高比例是自制的(13.7 [2.1,25.3];P=0.02)。
体验式烹饪营养课程可能会提高医学生提供饮食咨询的准备程度。需要进一步研究以确定此类干预措施对参与者自身饮食质量可能产生的影响。