The NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health: A Consolidated Review of Global Efforts Towards Medical and Healthcare-Related Nutrition Education.
Delivery of Health Care
/ methods
Education, Medical
/ methods
Evidence-Based Medicine
Health Education
/ methods
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health Personnel
/ education
Health Plan Implementation
Health Promotion
Humans
Nutrition Therapy
/ methods
Nutritional Sciences
/ education
Nutritionists
/ education
United Kingdom
Journal
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series
ISSN: 1664-2155
Titre abrégé: Nestle Nutr Inst Workshop Ser
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101577268
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
2019
2019
Historique:
entrez:
29
11
2019
pubmed:
30
11
2019
medline:
21
10
2020
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Whilst there is much focus on applying resources to generate evidence from human nutrition research, whether these involve experiment, observation or intervention, there is considerably little investment in the development and evaluation of effective approaches to apply the available knowledge base. Furthermore, when translating nutrition knowledge to the population at large, there are barriers to implementation, retention, and sustained impact, often due to largely unregulated public information on nutrition causing significant confusion and conflict. Healthcare professionals, therefore, have a key role in becoming reliable knowledge brokers, translating nutrition science to clinical or public health practice. However, with the exception of dietitians, who are relatively few in number, other segments of the healthcare workforce receive little or relatively inconsistent training in practice-ready aspects of nutrition. Over the past decade, the NNEdPro Global Centre in Cambridge (www.nnedpro.org.uk) has been working as a partnership between doctors, dietitians, nutritionists and others, both within and across borders to assess practice gaps affecting patients and the public. This is typically followed by taking a step back to look at the available nutrition evidence base - where this is adequate but can benefit from better evidence synthesis for education versus where there is a need for further primary research to strengthen the evidence base - and then taking a step forward to develop, deliver, and evaluate the impact of bespoke nutrition education interventions on the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of the healthcare workforce. Whilst focusing on the nutrition education of healthcare professionals, the NNEdPro lean-innovation approach spans over 40 projects and initiatives in over 12 countries using the Knowledge-to-Action Cycle as a framework to ignite the implementation potential of high quality research to promote best practice.
Identifiants
pubmed: 31779009
pii: 000499557
doi: 10.1159/000499557
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Review
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
143-150Informations de copyright
© 2020 Nestlé Nutrition Institute, Switzerland/S. Karger AG, Basel.