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Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program

INTRODUCTION: Obesity and diabetes are common diagnoses in the primary care population, especially in urban settings. Physicians providing preventive culinary and nutrition education to patients may be able to uniquely address these medical issues; however, culinary and nutrition education among med...

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Autores principales: Lang, Ryan D., Jennings, Mary Carol, Lam, Clarence, Yeh, Hsin-Chieh, Zhu, Colin, Kumra, Tina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Association of American Medical Colleges 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7010195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32051842
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10859
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author Lang, Ryan D.
Jennings, Mary Carol
Lam, Clarence
Yeh, Hsin-Chieh
Zhu, Colin
Kumra, Tina
author_facet Lang, Ryan D.
Jennings, Mary Carol
Lam, Clarence
Yeh, Hsin-Chieh
Zhu, Colin
Kumra, Tina
author_sort Lang, Ryan D.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Obesity and diabetes are common diagnoses in the primary care population, especially in urban settings. Physicians providing preventive culinary and nutrition education to patients may be able to uniquely address these medical issues; however, culinary and nutrition education among medical residency programs is insufficient. METHODS: We describe a pilot of a novel interactive approach to culinary and nutrition education focused on preventive medicine residents who were trained to provide culinary and nutrition skills to community members in three separate workshops. We developed and implemented a series of three culinary education workshops with 11, eight, and nine preventive medicine residents in each respective workshop. A total of 16 residents were invited to participate. A physician-chef facilitated each workshop with the residents within a community church kitchen and meeting area. We evaluated self-reported data on confidence level with culinary education and resident attitudes toward effects of culinary education on patient behaviors, as well as frequency of home-cooked meals and personal cooking competency, as indicators of resident proficiency. RESULTS: A significant increase was noted in self-reported cooking competency after culinary workshops when evaluating change from the first workshop to the final workshop ( p = .038). Increases in home-cooking frequency and belief that lifestyle medicine impacts patient behavior were also observed but did not achieve statistical significance. DISCUSSION: Culinary workshops are a useful tool to enhance nutrition education in a residency curriculum and may be an effective way to improve resident perceptions regarding the impact of nutrition education in the community.
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spelling pubmed-70101952020-02-12 Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program Lang, Ryan D. Jennings, Mary Carol Lam, Clarence Yeh, Hsin-Chieh Zhu, Colin Kumra, Tina MedEdPORTAL Original Publication INTRODUCTION: Obesity and diabetes are common diagnoses in the primary care population, especially in urban settings. Physicians providing preventive culinary and nutrition education to patients may be able to uniquely address these medical issues; however, culinary and nutrition education among medical residency programs is insufficient. METHODS: We describe a pilot of a novel interactive approach to culinary and nutrition education focused on preventive medicine residents who were trained to provide culinary and nutrition skills to community members in three separate workshops. We developed and implemented a series of three culinary education workshops with 11, eight, and nine preventive medicine residents in each respective workshop. A total of 16 residents were invited to participate. A physician-chef facilitated each workshop with the residents within a community church kitchen and meeting area. We evaluated self-reported data on confidence level with culinary education and resident attitudes toward effects of culinary education on patient behaviors, as well as frequency of home-cooked meals and personal cooking competency, as indicators of resident proficiency. RESULTS: A significant increase was noted in self-reported cooking competency after culinary workshops when evaluating change from the first workshop to the final workshop ( p = .038). Increases in home-cooking frequency and belief that lifestyle medicine impacts patient behavior were also observed but did not achieve statistical significance. DISCUSSION: Culinary workshops are a useful tool to enhance nutrition education in a residency curriculum and may be an effective way to improve resident perceptions regarding the impact of nutrition education in the community. Association of American Medical Colleges 2019-12-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7010195/ /pubmed/32051842 http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10859 Text en Copyright © 2019 Lang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) license.
spellingShingle Original Publication
Lang, Ryan D.
Jennings, Mary Carol
Lam, Clarence
Yeh, Hsin-Chieh
Zhu, Colin
Kumra, Tina
Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program
title Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program
title_full Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program
title_fullStr Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program
title_full_unstemmed Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program
title_short Community Culinary Workshops as a Nutrition Curriculum in a Preventive Medicine Residency Program
title_sort community culinary workshops as a nutrition curriculum in a preventive medicine residency program
topic Original Publication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7010195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32051842
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10859
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