Raj Minakshi, Peters Haeley, Teran-Garcia Margarita, Khan Naiman, Zhou Fangyu, Gatzke Lisa, Brooks Ian
Department of Health and Kinesiology, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801, United States.
Illinois Extension, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801, United States.
JAMIA Open. 2025 May 28;8(3):ooaf043. doi: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooaf043. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Despite growing recognition of the critical role of nutrition in promoting population health, clinicians lack access to point-of-care resources to support culturally relevant nutrition services. This study aims to (1) evaluate Registered Dietitian Nutritionists' (RDN) likelihood of using a web-based tool to provide culturally- and medically tailored nutrition services, (2) identify needed or preferred features, and (3) examine concerns related to the development or implementation of a web-based tool.
We conducted a cross-sectional, online survey of RDNs providing nutrition services in healthcare settings across the U.S. involving closed- and open-ended questions.
Of 155 RDNs, over 70% indicated being very or extremely likely to use a point-of-care web-based tool. Respondents sought content such as culturally-relevant recipes and an accessible tool that would integrate into their workflow. Concerns were related to quality of information provided and technical considerations such as data privacy.
Development of a web-based tool to support culturally- and medically tailored nutrition services may fill an unmet need within the healthcare workforce. This tool could be used as a point-of-care resource to optimize patient care and cultural inclusivity and could also function as a sustainable educational resource. Engaging culturally diverse patients and clinicians in tool development is critical for ensuring accessibility and optimal scope and quality of content. Privacy and security of information is essential to developing a trustworthy and equitable tool.
Our findings suggest the need for a point of care web-based tool to support culturally- and medically tailored nutrition services across healthcare settings.
尽管人们越来越认识到营养在促进公众健康方面的关键作用,但临床医生缺乏即时可用的资源来支持具有文化相关性的营养服务。本研究旨在:(1)评估注册营养师(RDN)使用基于网络的工具提供具有文化和医学针对性的营养服务的可能性;(2)确定所需或偏好的功能;(3)研究与基于网络的工具的开发或实施相关的问题。
我们对在美国医疗环境中提供营养服务的注册营养师进行了一项横断面在线调查,调查包含封闭式和开放式问题。
在155名注册营养师中,超过70%表示非常或极其有可能使用即时可用的基于网络的工具。受访者寻求如具有文化相关性的食谱等内容以及一个可融入其工作流程的便捷工具。担忧涉及所提供信息的质量以及数据隐私等技术考量。
开发一个基于网络的工具来支持具有文化和医学针对性的营养服务可能满足医疗工作队伍中未被满足的需求。该工具可作为即时可用资源,以优化患者护理和文化包容性,还可作为可持续的教育资源。让具有不同文化背景的患者和临床医生参与工具开发对于确保工具的可及性以及内容的最佳范围和质量至关重要。信息的隐私和安全对于开发一个值得信赖且公平的工具至关重要。
我们的研究结果表明需要一个基于网络的即时可用工具,以支持跨医疗环境提供具有文化和医学针对性的营养服务。