
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The Make America Healthy Again movement is getting buy-in from academia for its new curriculum initiative.
Over 19 medical schools signed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)’s “Nutrition Education Pledge” on Monday. The pledge aims to incorporate 40 hours of nutritional education into graduation requirements effective this fall, according to an HHS press release.
Medical students previously received only 1.2 hours of nutritional education on average.
“Poor diets are the primary driver of America’s chronic disease epidemic, and today’s announcement reflects the shifting landscape toward placing nutrition and prevention at the core of patient health,” HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.stated in the press release. “Still, more work remains, and I look forward to seeing nutrition play an increased role as the latest science, data, and best practices develop.”
The 40-hour standard requires medical students to achieve competencies in 71 areas including but not limited to: “Nutritional differences” between “minimally processed vs highly processed foods,” “Work[ing] with other health professionals for multidisciplinary nutrition care,” and “Responsible use of AI for nutrition advice.”
Adding to the 54 schools that took the pledge earlier this year, some prominent names among the 19 new signees include the University of Massachusetts, University of Maryland, and Texas A&M University.
Ninety percent of the nation’s $5.3 trillion in healthcare spending goes toward fighting chronic and mental health conditions, according to the Center for Disease Control. Another study estimates that approximately 1 million Americans die from food-related chronic conditions per year.
“The recent commitment by medical schools and the nation’s leading medical education, accreditation, certification, and licensing organizations to strengthen nutrition education marks a significant step toward addressing the chronic disease crisis,” an HHS spokesperson told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “With more than 40% of federal health care spending tied to largely preventable, diet-related conditions and more than 70% of U.S. adults overweight or obese, these institutions are recognizing the need for stronger prevention-focused training.
“Under Secretary Kennedy’s leadership, this effort reflects growing support for equipping future physicians with the knowledge and tools to prevent, manage, and treat chronic disease through evidence-based nutrition and lifestyle interventions.”
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