April 3, 2013

The Conversation

Teaching doctors to cook: recipe for a healthier community?

This article was originally published at The Conversation. Read the original article.

By Alessandro R Demaio, University of Copenhagen

The traditional adage in the world of medical education, is to “see one, do one, teach one”… Medicine, at its fundamental core, is a profession best learnt through experience.. Best mastered through engaging with patients and observing senior colleagues. This is why we have teaching hospitals. Why we spend more than half of most medical courses in hospitals and not in universities.. And why we see so many trainee-doctors every time we go for that checkup.

Flickr / ReneS

But a recent paper in the prestigious journal JAMA suggests a new adage for doctors in the 21st century.. An updated ideology for health-care professionals entering a world in which diabetes, heart disease and obesity are major killers and where over-nutrition is often more common than under-nutrition.

A delicious new recipe for education and health, excuse the pun, of ‘See One. Taste One. Cook One. Teach One.  You see, doctors are trained to prescribe medications to bring down their patients' cholesterol. They’re even lectured on the benefits of exercise for a healthy heart. But at no stage in most medical curricula are medical students taught how to cook. How to approach food in a healthy way, to maintain a balanced diet or to prepare a “heart-friendly” snack. Yet the largest health threats facing most communities globally, are those caused and remedied by the quality and quantity of the food we consume.

We look to doctors as leaders, as role-models and as trusted providers of health – so why not stock their pantries with recipes for healthier living, which in turn they can provide to their patients.

Flickr / campdarby

Of course, it is more complicated, and I am not suggesting that chef-doctors are the answer to our obesogenic societies, but it would be a very intelligent step. Almost free to the taxpayer – in sharp contrast to treating the outcome of the obesity epidemic – giving health promoters the skills to cook a balanced meal seems logical.

I also admit that the typical medical course is already dense, as with any course at university, but the role of tertiary education is to instill in us the skills to overcome common professional challenges. How can we expect medical professionals, not just doctors, to guide their patients to health (and healthy food is part of this), if they don’t have the skills themselves? If we’re not teaching the teachers some basic recipes for a nutritious and healthy lifestyle – how can we expect them to do the same for their community?

There are good examples from the USA, and the benefits of knowing how to make healthy, affordable food is nothing new to many – see the Kitchen Garden Project and Food Revolution. But as a community investing in the education of doctors, maybe we have the recipe slightly wrong… In addition to anatomy, physiology and pharmacology, could a dash of cookery be the missing ingredient for a healthier society?

For more on global health, explore Translational Global Health, from Alessandro and PLOS
Alessandro R Demaio does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.

The Conversation
This article was originally published at The Conversation. Read the original article.

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