WHAT IS WNCIT?
WNCIT is a Web based Nutrition Implementation Toolkit designed to enable medical courses across Australia to effectively embed nutrition into entry level medical courses, enabling graduates to be nutritionally competent and effectively reduce the burden of lifestyle related disease within our community
Why Nutrition is an essential component of medical care
Medical graduates in Australia are ill equipped to identify and appropriately manage nutritional issues of patients, whether as inpatients or those living in residential care or the community. Inappropriate nutritional management contributes to increased complication rates and increased hospitalisation time (Ulltang et al. 2013). Economic evidence indicates that treatment or prevention of malnutrition provides an opportunity to improve patient wellbeing and lower health system costs (Milte et al. 2013). Increasing rates of obesity and type II diabetes in the community are primarily due to unhealthy lifestyle practices including poor nutrition, which require early identification, management and appropriate professional support. To effectively reduce the burden of disease related to nutrition, doctors and other health professionals need to be able to identify and treat patients appropriately within an interdisciplinary team, to ensure suitable treatment is delivered.
Doctors could effectively reduce the burden of disease if they had the skills to identify nutritional risk and effectively contribute to the nutritional management of patients.
Medical graduates in Australia are ill equipped to identify and appropriately manage nutritional issues of patients, whether as inpatients or those living in residential care or the community. Inappropriate nutritional management contributes to increased complication rates and increased hospitalisation time (Ulltang et al. 2013). Economic evidence indicates that treatment or prevention of malnutrition provides an opportunity to improve patient wellbeing and lower health system costs (Milte et al. 2013). Increasing rates of obesity and type II diabetes in the community are primarily due to unhealthy lifestyle practices including poor nutrition, which require early identification, management and appropriate professional support. To effectively reduce the burden of disease related to nutrition, doctors and other health professionals need to be able to identify and treat patients appropriately within an interdisciplinary team, to ensure suitable treatment is delivered.
Doctors could effectively reduce the burden of disease if they had the skills to identify nutritional risk and effectively contribute to the nutritional management of patients.
Nutrition Competency Framework
Ulltang M, Vivanti AP, Murray E . Malnutrition prevalence in a medical assessment and planning unit and its association with hospital readmission. Aust Health Rev. 2013 Nov;37(5):636-41
Milte RK, Ratcliffe J, Miller MD, Crotty M. Economic evaluation for protein and energy supplementation in adults: opportunities to strengthen the evidence. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2013 Dec;67(12):1243-50.
Milte RK, Ratcliffe J, Miller MD, Crotty M. Economic evaluation for protein and energy supplementation in adults: opportunities to strengthen the evidence. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2013 Dec;67(12):1243-50.
Support for this project has been provided by the Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching . The views in this project do not necessarily reflect the views of the Australian Government office for learning and Teaching. Unless otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.