将营养教育摆上桌面:开发满足未来医生需求的课程。

IF 3.3 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health Pub Date : 2022-09-11 eCollection Date: 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjnph-2022-000510
Glenys Jones, Elaine Macaninch, Duane Mellor, Ayela Spiro, Kathy Martyn, Thomas Butler, Alice Johnson, J Bernadette Moore
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19 进一步加剧了英国健康不平等的扩大趋势。令人震惊的是,英格兰最贫困地区和最不贫困地区在总体健康状况良好的情况下生活的年数相差超过 18 年。饮食不健康和肥胖是慢性心脏代谢疾病和癌症以及严重 COVID-19 的主要风险因素。为了让医生为病人提供最好的治疗,迫切需要改善医学院本科生培训中的营养教育。有鉴于此,营养协会成立了医学教育跨专业工作组(AfN IPG),为医生开发新的、现代化的本科营养课程。AfN IPG 汇集了来自营养学、饮食学和医学专业的专家,他们代表着国家卫生服务机构、皇家学院、医学院和大学、政府公共卫生部门、学术团体、医学生和营养教育工作者。课程开发的主要目标是通过与当前的医生本科培训相结合,使其具有可实施性。通过反复和透明的协商过程,确定了 13 项关键营养能力,通过掌握 11 项毕业基础知识来实现。促进实现这些关键能力的课程分为八个专题领域,每个领域都有一个学习目标陈述和教学要点,详细说明了所需的知识和技能发展。教学要点可通过临床教学、辅助学习活动和实际技能学习相结合的方式来实现。因此,营养学课程能够帮助医科学生掌握这些营养学能力,从而补充和加强医科学生达到医学总会毕业生成绩的能力。由于营养学是一门综合性科学,AfN IPG 建议在专科培训之前将该课程纳入医学本科的初始学习中。这将使我们未来的医生认识到营养与他们培训的多个方面(从生理系统到以患者为中心的护理)之间的关系,并获得对健康和疾病的广泛而全面的理解。此外,这将有助于医学院将营养学学习机会纳入核心医学培训中,而无需在已经很拥挤的课程中增加大量新内容,也不会增加教学人员的负担。医生营养学本科课程旨在支持医学院培养了解和认识营养在健康中的作用的未来医生。此外,该课程还将使前线工作人员有能力向病人提出与营养相关的问题,将其作为加强护理的基本组成部分,并在可能有益的情况下,适当转介病人接受注册营养师(RNutr)/注册助理营养师(ANutr)或注册营养师(RD)的营养支持。
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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Putting nutrition education on the table: development of a curriculum to meet future doctors' needs.

COVID-19 has further exacerbated trends of widening health inequalities in the UK. Shockingly, the number of years of life lived in general good health differs by over 18 years between the most and least deprived areas of England. Poor diets and obesity are established major risk factors for chronic cardiometabolic diseases and cancer, as well as severe COVID-19. For doctors to provide the best care to their patients, there is an urgent need to improve nutrition education in undergraduate medical school training. With this imperative, the Association for Nutrition established the Inter-Professional Working Group on Medical Education (AfN IPG) to develop a new, modern undergraduate nutrition curriculum for medical doctors. The AfN IPG brought together expertise from nutrition, dietetic and medical professionals, representing the National Health Service, royal colleges, medical schools and universities, government public health departments, learned societies, medical students and nutrition educators. The curriculum was developed with the key objective of being implementable through integration with the current undergraduate training of medical doctors. Through an iterative and transparent consultative process, 13 key nutritional competencies, to be achieved through mastery of 11 graduation fundamentals, were established. The curriculum to facilitate the achievement of these key competencies is divided into eight topic areas, each underpinned by a learning objective statement and teaching points detailing the knowledge and skills development required. The teaching points can be achieved through clinical teaching and a combination of facilitated learning activities and practical skills acquisition. Therefore, the nutrition curriculum enables mastery of these nutritional competencies in a way that will complement and strengthen medical students' achievement of the General Medical Council Outcomes for Graduates. As nutrition is an integrative science, the AfN IPG recommends the curriculum is incorporated into initial undergraduate medical studies before specialist training. This will enable our future doctors to recognise how nutrition is related to multiple aspects of their training, from physiological systems to patient-centred care, and acquire a broad, inclusive understanding of health and disease. In addition, it will facilitate medical schools to embed nutrition learning opportunities within the core medical training, without the need to add in a large number of new components to an already crowded programme or with additional burden to teaching staff. The undergraduate nutrition curriculum for medical doctors is designed to support medical schools to create future doctors who will understand and recognise the role of nutrition in health. Moreover, it will equip front-line staff to feel empowered to raise nutrition-related issues with their patients as a fundamental part of enhanced care and to appropriately refer on for nutrition support with a registered nutritionist (RNutr)/registered associate nutritionist (ANutr) or a registered dietitian (RD) where this is likely to be beneficial.

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来源期刊
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention and Health Nursing-Nutrition and Dietetics
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
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