
Are Doctors Knowledgeable About Nutrition?Β
[ad_1]
Do you know more about basic nutrition than most doctors?
βA poor diet now outranks smoking as the leading cause of death globally and in the United States, according to the latest data.β The top killer of Americans is the American diet, as you can see below and at 0:23 in my video How Much Do Doctors Actually Know About Nutrition?.

If diet is humanityβs number one killer, then, obviously, nutrition is the number one subject taught in medical school, right? Sadly, βmedical students around the world [are] poorly trained in nutrition.β It isnβt that medical students arenβt interested in learning about it. In fact, βinterest in nutrition was βuniformly highβ among medical students,β but medical schools just arenβt teaching it. βWithout a solid foundation of clinical nutrition knowledge and skills, physicians worldwide are generally not equipped to even begin to have an informed nutrition conversation with their patientsβ¦.β
How bad is it? One study, βAssessing the clinical nutrition knowledge of medical doctors,β found the majority of participants got 70 percent of the questions wrongβand they were multiple choice questions, so they should have gotten about a fifth of them right just by chance. βWrong answers in theβ¦knowledge test were not limited to difο¬cult or demanding questionsβ either. For example, less than half of the doctors were able to guess how many calories are in fat, carbohydrates, and protein; only one in ten knew the recommended protein intake; and only about one in three knew what a healthy body mass index (BMI) was. Weβre talking about really basic nutrition knowledge.
Even worse, not only did the majority of medical doctors get a failing grade, but 30 percent of those who failed had βa high self-perception of their CN [clinical nutrition] expertise.β They werenβt only clueless about nutrition; they were clueless that they were clueless about nutrition, a particularly bad combination given that doctors are βtrusted and influential sourcesβ of healthy eating advice. βFor those consumers who get information from their personal healthcare professional, 78% indicate making a change in their eating habits as a result of those conversations.β So, if the doctor got everything they know from some article in a magazine while waiting in the grocery store checkout aisle, thatβs what the patients will be following.
Of doctors surveyed, βonly 25% correctly identified the American Heart Association recommended number of fruit and vegetable servings per day, and fewer still (20%) were aware of the recommended daily added sugar limit for adults.β So how are they going to counsel their patients? And get ready for this: Of the doctors who perceived themselves as having high nutrition knowledge, 93 percent couldnβt answer those two basic multiple-choice questions, as seen here and at 2:39 in my video.

βPhysicians with no genuine expertise in, say, neurosurgery [brain surgery] are neither likely to broadcast detailed opinions on that topic nor to have their βexpertβ opinions solicited by the media. Most topical domains in medicine enjoy such respect: we defer expert opinion and commentary to actual experts. Not so nutrition, where the common knowledge that physicians are generally ill-trained in this area is conjoined to routine invitations to physicians for their expert opinions on the matter. All too many are willing to provide theirs, absent any basis for actual expertiseβ¦β Or worse, theyβre βoften made on the basis of native bias and personal preference, at times directly tethered to personal gainβsuch as diet book salesβand so arises yet another ethical challenge.β Thatβs one of the reasons all the proceeds I receive from my books are donated directly to charity. I donβt want even the appearance of any conflicts of interest.
βIn a culture that routinely fails to distinguish expertise from mere opinion or personal anecdote, we physicians should be doing all we can to establish relevant barriers to entry for expert opinion in this [diet and nutrition], as in all other matters of genuine medical significance.β I mean, we arenβt talking celebrity gossip. Lives are at stake. βEntire industries are devoted to marketing messages that may conspire directly against well-informed medical advice in this area.β
βMedical 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 anachronismβ¦.The mission of medicine is to protect, defend, and advance the human condition. That mission cannot be fulfilled if the diet is neglected.β
A possible starting place? βPhysicians and health care organizations can collectively begin to emphasize their seriousness about nutrition in health care by practicing what they (theoretically) preach. 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.β
[ad_2]
Source_link
![]()


