Revisiting the Food- and Nutrition-Related Curriculum in Healthcare Education: An Example for Pharmacy Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design and Setting
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Origin of the Cases
3.2. Case Subjects
3.3. Ability of Pharmacy Interns to Discuss Nutritional Cases
3.4. Looking Up Additional Information
4. Discussion
4.1. Study Setting in Belgium
4.2. How Is Food Science Taught in Health Education?
4.3. What Does This Study Add?
5. Specific Recommendations for Health Education
Strengths and Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category or Nutritional Topic | N°, (%) |
---|---|
Food Supplements | 379 (37.8) |
- Multivitamin preparations | 52 |
- Vitamin D, calcium, or combinations | 45 |
- Preconception, pregnancy, or breastfeeding vitamins | 34 |
- Vitamins to improve sleep, diminish fatigue, or give an energy boost | 30 |
- Magnesium | 28 |
- Vitamins for studying | 27 |
- Supplements for specific indications (menopause, arthritis, diarrhea, bladder infection, etc.) | 23 |
- Red yeast rice for hypercholesterolemia or Q10 when statin use | 22 |
- Iron and vitamin B12 | 15 |
- Hair and nail vitamins | 14 |
- Omega 3, 6, or 9 | 13 |
- Vitamin C | 7 |
- Other | 69 |
Baby Food | 187 (18.6) |
- Formula for insatiety | 37 |
- Formula for constipation, diarrhea, colic, or combinations | 27 |
- Switching from formula to follow-on formula or growing-up milk | 26 |
- Formula for reflux and regurgitation | 21 |
- Formula for allergy prevention of treatment | 19 |
- Switching from breastmilk to formula | 18 |
- Switching from milk to solid foods | 5 |
- Formula supplementation when insufficient milk supply | 5 |
- Other (preparation, recommendations, etc.) | 29 |
Healthy Food and Food/Nutritional Recommendations | 106 (10.6) |
- Food recommendations in function of disease (constipation, heartburn, gout, diarrhea, migraine, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, etc.) | 59 |
- Food recommendations in function of vitamin or mineral deficiency (iron, B12, D, folic acid, etc.) | 18 |
- Food recommendations in function of colonoscopy, bowel examination, or gastric bypass | 10 |
- Balanced diet | 6 |
- Food restrictions during pregnancy | 5 |
- Other | 8 |
Weight Loss Diets and Products | 78 (7.8) |
- Weight-loss pills or supplements | 24 |
- Meal replacements | 20 |
- Specific diets (low-carb, soup diet, high protein, etc.) | 9 |
- Light products and sugar substitutes | 3 |
- Other | 22 |
High-Protein Foods/Drinks | 63 (6.27) |
- Food replacement in illness | 29 |
- Weight gain | 12 |
- Food supplements for the geriatric population | 11 |
- Other | 11 |
Food for Athletes | 48 (4.78) |
- Supplements for endurance training | 28 |
- Supplements for building up muscle mass | 10 |
- Other | 10 |
Interactions between Drugs and Food | 44 (4.38) |
- Combination of antibiotics and dairy | 16 |
- Combination of medication and alcohol | 8 |
- Combination of food supplements and food | 6 |
- Combination of medication and grapefruit | 3 |
- Other | 11 |
Food Allergies and Intolerances | 33 (3.29) |
- Gluten | 6 |
- Lactose | 5 |
- Other (cow’s milk protein allergy, wheat allergy, etc.) | 7 |
- Presence of allergens in drugs | 15 |
Vegetarianism and Veganism | 16 (1.59) |
- Vitamin or mineral deficiency | 11 |
- Other | 5 |
Food Safety | 11 (1.09) |
Diabetes and Diet | 11 (1.09) |
Food for the Geriatric Population | 9 (0.90) |
Ingredients in Food | 8 (0.80) |
Functional Foods/Nutraceuticals | 5 (0.50) |
Diet for Phenylketonuria | 3 (0.30) |
Enteral and Tube Feeding | 1 (0.10) |
Novel Foods and Hype-Surrounding Superfoods | 1 (0.10) |
E-Numbers | 1 (0.10) |
Category | Number of Cases (%) | Percentage of Cases in Which the Intern Had Enough Knowledge to Discuss the Case Immediately | Percentage of Cases in Which the Intern Had Enough Knowledge to Discuss the Case after Research (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Food supplements | 38% (n = 379) | 49% | 96% |
Baby food | 19% (n = 187) | 47% | 97% |
Healthy food and food/nutritional recommendations | 11% (n = 106) | 46% | 93% |
Weight-loss diets and products | 8% (n = 78) | 44% | 95% |
High-protein foods/drinks | 6% (n = 63) | 47% | 95% |
Food for athletes | 5% (n = 48) | 21% | 96% |
Interactions between drugs and food | 4% (n = 44) | 54% | 93% |
Food allergies and intolerances | 3% (n = 33) | 18% | 94% |
Vegetarianism and veganism | 2% (n = 16) | 25% | 94% |
Food safety | 1% (n = 11) | 27% | 100% |
Diabetes and diet | 1% (n = 11) | 45% | 100% |
Food for the geriatric population | 0.9% (n = 9) | 33% | 100% |
Ingredients in food | 0.8% (n = 8) | 37% | 87% |
Functional foods/Nutraceuticals | 0.5% (n = 5) | 60% | 100% |
Diet for phenylketonuria | 0.3% (n = 3) | 0% | 100% |
Enteral and tube feeding | 0.1% (n = 1) | 0% | 100% |
Novel foods and hype-surrounding superfoods | 0.1% (n = 1) | 0% | 100% |
E-numbers | 0.1% (n = 1) | 0% | 100% |
Category | Number of Cases (%) | Category | Number of Cases (%) |
---|---|---|---|
No sufficient knowledge to answer immediately | 557 (55%) | Used additional sources of information | 552/557 (99%) |
Used no additional sources of information | 5/557 (1%) | ||
Sufficient knowledge to answer immediately | 447 (51%) | Used additional sources of information | 228/447 (51%) |
Used no additional sources of information | 219/447 (49%) |
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Tommelein, E.; De Boevre, M.; Vanhie, L.; Van Tongelen, I.; Boussery, K.; De Saeger, S. Revisiting the Food- and Nutrition-Related Curriculum in Healthcare Education: An Example for Pharmacy Education. Pharmacy 2021, 9, 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020104
Tommelein E, De Boevre M, Vanhie L, Van Tongelen I, Boussery K, De Saeger S. Revisiting the Food- and Nutrition-Related Curriculum in Healthcare Education: An Example for Pharmacy Education. Pharmacy. 2021; 9(2):104. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020104
Chicago/Turabian StyleTommelein, Eline, Marthe De Boevre, Lize Vanhie, Inge Van Tongelen, Koen Boussery, and Sarah De Saeger. 2021. "Revisiting the Food- and Nutrition-Related Curriculum in Healthcare Education: An Example for Pharmacy Education" Pharmacy 9, no. 2: 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020104
APA StyleTommelein, E., De Boevre, M., Vanhie, L., Van Tongelen, I., Boussery, K., & De Saeger, S. (2021). Revisiting the Food- and Nutrition-Related Curriculum in Healthcare Education: An Example for Pharmacy Education. Pharmacy, 9(2), 104. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020104