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Paucity of Nutrition Education
28 Oct 2020
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(5 mins, 2019) What Your Doctor May Not Tell You

A 5-minute news clip explains that nutrition education is scant in medical schools today. Doctors are trained to diagnose-n-treat and diagnose-n-treat and diagnose-n-treat… how? With pills and procedures! How about dietary interventions?

(7 mins, 2015) Med Students Should Be Taught Nutrition in Medical School | Dr Luigi Fontans

Dr Fontana laments that nutrition is not taught in medical school.

Dr T Colin Campbell's Views

In this 72-min talk Focusing on Nutrients Is A Scam, Dr Colin Campbell explains that nutrition education is minimal (almost missing) in medical schools. For example, NIH (National Institutes of Health) has 27 different institutes (for cancer, eyes, aging, and so on). None of these 27 institutes is for nutrition!

These views are echoed in the shorter video below too:

(17 mins, 2018) Dr Colin Campbell: Why is the Science of Nutrition Ignored in Medicine? (TED Talk)
(13 mins, 2021) Among The 27 NIH Institutes, None Are Dedicated To Nutrition | Dr T Colin Campbell
(2021) How Much Do Doctors Actually Know About Nutrition?

(6 mins) Transcript.

Dr Greger begins by citing GBD (Global Burden of Disease) data which is the world's largest database ever assembled (thanks to Gates Foundation) for death and disability and its causes. What's the #1 factor that causes death and disability? 'Dietary factors'; in other words, 'poor food habits'.

Dr Greger then wonders: if diet is the #1 factor in death and disability, then medical schools must be preparing doctors well in nutrition… but are they?

Excerpts from the video:

How bad is it? One study “assessing the clinical nutrition knowledge of medical doctors” found the majority got 70 percent of the questions wrong. And they were multiple choice questions, so they should have gotten a fifth right just by chance. And the “wrong answers… were not limited to difficult or demanding questions.” For example, less than half could guess how many calories are in fat, carbs and protein; only 1 in 10 knew the recommended protein intake; and only about 1 in 3 knew what a healthy BMI was. I mean, this is like super basic nutrition knowledge.

And what’s worse, not only did the majority of medical doctors get a failing grade, but 30 percent of those who failed had “a high self-perception of their [clinical nutrition] expertise,” meaning not only were they clueless about nutrition, they were also clueless that they were clueless about nutrition, a particularly bad combination given that doctors are trusted and influential sources of healthy eating advice.

“Only [a quarter of doctors surveyed] correctly identified the American Heart Association[’s] recommended number of fruit and vegetable servings per day, and fewer still… were aware of the recommended daily added sugar limit[s]…”. So how are they going to counsel patients on it? Yet, again, of the doctors who perceived themselves as having high nutrition knowledge, 93 percent couldn’t answer those two basic multiple-choice questions.

“Medical education must be brought up to date. For physicians to be ill trained in the very area most impactful on the rate of premature death at the population level is an absurd anachronism.” “The mission of medicine is to protect, defend, and advance the human condition. That mission cannot be fulfilled if diet is neglected.”

Maybe one place to start is for “physicians and health care organizations [to] collectively begin to emphasize their seriousness about nutrition in health care by practicing what they [at least should be preaching]. Is it appropriate to serve pizza and soft drinks at a resident conference while bemoaning the high prevalence of obesity and encouraging patients to eat healthier? A similarly poor example exists in medical conferences, including national meetings, where some morning sessions are accompanied by foods such as donuts and sausage.”

(2016) Why You Should Care About Nutrition

(3 mins) Transcript. Excerpts:

"Unfortunately, doctors suffer from a severe nutrition deficiency—in education. Most doctors are just never taught about the impact healthy nutrition can have on the course of illness, and so, they graduate without this powerful tool in their medical toolbox."

"Now, there are also institutional barriers—such as time constraints, and lack of reimbursement. In general, doctors aren’t paid for counseling people on how to take better care of themselves. Of course, the drug companies also play a role in influencing medical education and practice. Ask your doctor when’s the last time they were taken out to dinner by Big Broccoli—it’s probably been a while."

(2021) Hospitals with 100 Percent Plant-Based Menus

(6 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "The American Medical Association has passed a resolution encouraging healthy plant-based food options be available in hospitals." Excerpt:

Fewer than 50 percent of medical schools reported teaching any nutrition in clinical practice. In fact, they may be effectively teaching anti-nutrition, as students typically begin medical school with a greater appreciation for the role of nutrition in health than when they leave.

This is the percentage of medical students at different schools indicating that nutrition is important to their careers upon entry into medical school. Smart bunch — about three-quarters on average. Okay, but then, after two years of instruction in medical school, they were asked the same question. And the numbers plummeted. In fact, at most schools it was zero percent. Instead of being educated, they got de-educated. They had this silly notion that nutrition was important washed right out of their brains. "Preclinical teaching [meaning the first two years of medical school] engenders a loss of a sense of the relevance of the applied discipline of nutrition."

And following medical school, nutrition education during residency is minimal or, more typically, absent. Major updates were released in 2018 for residency and fellowship training requirements, and there were zero requirements for nutrition. So, you could have an internal medicine graduate who comes out of some prestigious program who has learned nothing — literally nothing — about nutrition.

Why isn't diet routinely addressed already in both medical education and practice, and what should be done about it? One of the reasons for the medical silence in nutrition, sadly, is that nutrition takes a back seat because there are few financial incentives to support it.

(2011) Medical School Nutrition Education

(2 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "Most medical schools in the United States fail to provide even a bare minimum of nutrition training."

(2011) Doctors Know Less than They Think About Nutrition

(2 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "Doctors found to be overconfident in their knowledge and ability to counsel patients about lifestyle modification for chronic disease prevention."

(2007) Doctors' Nutritional Ignorance

(3 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "Medical education continues to underemphasize clinical nutrition."

(2011) Do Doctors Make the Grade?

(2 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "Doctors and other health professionals were put to the test for their nutrition knowledge regarding diet and heart disease."

(2015) Physicians May Be Missing Their Most Important Tool

(5 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "What might happen if nutritional excellence were taught in medical school?"

How Have WFPB Doctors Learnt About Nutrition?

In the documentary Code Blue (98 mins, 2020), Dr Robert Ostfeld explains:

"Physicians know so little about nutrition! We are susceptible to the same societal messages that everyone else gets. So physicians are equally confused as everyone else out there."

If nutrition is not taught in medical schools, how have so many WFPB doctors learnt about it? For fascinating personal stories, see How Did Whole Food Plant-Based Doctors Learn About It? For example, Dr Bajekal (spine surgeon and orthopedist in UK; MS in Orthopedics from AIIMS) explains:

"One day I was scrolling through Netflix when I came across a documentary that caught my attention called 'Forks over Knives'. Watching this prompted me to immediately give up eggs, dairy and fish and to adopt a purely whole food plant-based diet."

"Do I have any regrets? Yes of course. I feel stupid that as a Doctor I did not know anything about nutrition and my knowledge came from straplines in newspaper articles. I feel sad that I had ill health for absolutely no reason. I strongly feel that as healthcare professionals, we should inspire our patients and use every contact to help them avoid chronic ill health and regain their health using a lifestyle medicine approach."

For more fascinating stories, please browse through How Did Whole Food Plant-Based Doctors Learn About It?

Lifestyle Medicine in Medical Schools

(2021) University of Southern California, School of Medicine (USC SOM), Greenville has started teaching Lifestyle Medicine courses in all four years of medical school! It's a core curriculum; all students are required to take these classes. In these classes, medical students at USC SOM actually get to develop hands-on skills in a kitchen too!

(2022) University of California San Diego has a Lifestyle Medicine track for its Preventive Medicine residents!

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