Home Communication Put Nutrition Counseling in Primary Care
Put Nutrition Counseling in Primary Care.

Put Nutrition Counseling in Primary Care

The United Nations designated 2016 to 2025 the “Decade of Action on Nutrition” in recognition of the growing importance of food and diet as it relates to all aspects of human health.

We’re almost halfway through, and we’re not making the progress we need to.

A comprehensive study of scientific evidence for global diet goals and sustainability, the EAT-Lancet Commission Summary Report, stated, “Unhealthy diets now pose a greater risk to morbidity and mortality than unsafe sex, alcohol, drug and tobacco use combined.”

Further, a significant majority of people don’t have diets that support health and wellbeing.

There are a couple of reasons for this, but the fact that nutrition isn’t incorporated into general medicine leads the way. It’s no wonder; there’s virtually no time spent on Nutrition in medical school or residency.

Giving short shrift to nutrition education prevents providers from recognizing food and diet as fundamental in disease development and control, which leaves a focus on medication as the only means of altering pathophysiology.

When doctors aren’t formally educated about nutrition, it shouldn’t surprise us that it’s rarely addressed in clinical visits.

Studies have shown that nutrition counseling occurs in only 20 to 30 percent of non-acute primary care visits, and the length of counseling per visit averages one minute.

It’s not something that can easily be inserted into an office visit.

Visits are already very busy and burdened by tasks required by the electronic health record that compete for time against the patient’s needs.

Putting nutrition into the medical conversation is worth the time and effort though. Nutrition education, when coupled with other interventions, works.

Studies have demonstrated positive change and health benefits when dietary habits in low-income neighborhoods are prioritized in medical care as a result of it.

Expecting patients to recognize the role nutrition plays on their health and seek out nutrition education on their own, or referring them to a nutritionist, is not sufficient.

Inequities persist in access and means to consult a Nutritionist, with many insurances not covering this service, or only covering it if the patient already has a significant chronic disease like diabetes, but not before.

Primary care is usually more accessible, and more importantly, by addressing nutrition in primary care practice, the divide between diet and health or disease can be properly addressed and managed.

It’s crucial that doctors do this in order to protect the entire health care system.

For years, the World Health Organization has asserted that non -communicable diseases are on the rise, and there is an association with increased consumption of processed foods in modern diets, specifically fats, sugars, and salt.

Including nutrition in primary care isn’t impossible.

The WHO projects that by 2025, the end of the “Decade of Action on Nutrition,” the economic cost of food-related non-communicable disease and obesity alone will account for over seven trillion dollars across the globe.

Including nutrition in primary care isn’t impossible. When other preventive screenings and counseling are incorporated into primary care, they’ve caused seismic shifts in population health.

As a prime example, vaccination programs cause synergistic effects on health.

Other evidence-based screening practices have been implemented in primary care with great success.

Screening and counseling for alcohol and tobacco exposure, high-risk behaviors, and depression are just a few examples.

Screening for food insecurity does happen in some practices, but this needs to be made universal and expanded to incorporate screening for nutritional content, harmful (ultra-processed) foods, and excess calories.

The effects of this lack of integration of nutrition into medical care became exceedingly clear when the COVID-19 pandemic struck.

Obesity, hypertension, and diabetes are all linked with poor diet and were all identified as risk factors for hospitalization and even death from the coronavirus.

COVID-19 is a striking example of the serious consequences of poor nutrition, but there are many others like cognitive decline and dementia, osteoporosis, cancer, and immune system impairment.

One of the best solutions to rising obesity and non-communicable disease rates lie in primary care.

Medical professionals can influence by educating their patients to choose and purchase healthier options.

Merely improving nutrition education succeeds in shifting people’s thinking about food.

Simultaneous with the WHO’s declaration of the Decade of Action on Nutrition is the “food is medicine” movement that has been growing in response to mounting evidence that a nutritionally-sound diet and access to quality foods improve health outcomes.

The theory behind food is medicine is that food is a preventative public health system.

This movement includes prescription meals to people with multiple chronic conditions and low income, food delivery services, and community food quality assessment.

{module title=”Adsence article”}

So far, the food is medicine solution has proven cost-effective, and one study reported a 16 percent reduction in health care costs in meal recipients.

We know that widening health disparities are partially diet-dependent. Integrating nutrition into primary care is really a social necessity.

Just as everyone should have access to medical care, all people should have equal access to proper nutritional guidance and nutritious food.

www.MedicalManage.gr/en/

Medical Manage

Εμείς και οι συνεργάτες μας αποθηκεύουμε ή/και έχουμε πρόσβαση σε πληροφορίες σε μια συσκευή, όπως cookies και επεξεργαζόμαστε προσωπικά δεδομένα, όπως μοναδικά αναγνωριστικά και τυπικές πληροφορίες, που αποστέλλονται από μια συσκευή για εξατομικευμένες διαφημίσεις και περιεχόμενο, μέτρηση διαφημίσεων και περιεχομένου, καθώς και απόψεις του κοινού για την ανάπτυξη και βελτίωση προϊόντων. Αποδοχή Cookies Όροι Προστασίας Προσωπικών Δεδομένων