Nutrition in Medical School — Do Doctors Learn Enough
This episode is a panel discussion between me and three panel members who are either finishing medical school now or are recent graduates of medical school.
This episode is a panel discussion between me and three panel members who are either finishing medical school now or are recent graduates of medical school. We discuss the current state of nutrition in medical school, whether and how it should change, what doctors and future doctors should do to obtain a deep understanding of nutrition, and what patients should do to obtain high-quality, nutritionally focused medical care.
Listen to the Audio
Show Notes
In this episode, you will find all of the following and more:
0:00:38 I introduce the panel to you in my own words.
0:04:36 The panel members introduce themselves to you in their words and tell you how they got interested in nutrition.
0:11:33 Everything in our body is made from our food. So is there a difference between learning “nutrition” and learning how everything in the body works? Does the biochemistry, physiology, and molecular biology learned in medical school count as learning nutrition?
0:14:09 Triage theory: you can learn every pathway, but if you don’t learn how they’re prioritized in suboptimal nutrient status, you haven’t learned useful nutrition.
0:21:30 The deficiency of clinical relevance and connections between clinical and basic science material.
0:23:54 Is teaching less the key to teaching deeper?
0:27:47 Is the purpose of the medical prerequisites and curricula to sort people rather than teach useful information?
0:29:08 It’s just harder to teach in a way that connects the dots.
0:33:00 My upcoming class on energy metabolism.
0:34:13 Are rare metabolic diseases (inborn errors of metabolism) really irrelevant?
0:36:25 Is the medical diagnostic paradigm too binary? Should we be looking at disease and health on a continuum instead?
0:44:51 Wildly misaligned economic incentives take the focus off nutrition.
0:50:12 In order to avoid burdening patients with unnecessary worry, we often withhold information. But this often hurts our collective pool of knowledge by hampering critical research and impairs our ability to help people.
1:03:35 Nutrition in medical school is abysmal, but do we need more and better nutrition education in medical school, a separate type of medical degree for primary care that focuses on nutrition, or more collaboration between physicians and others (for example, dietitians) who specialize in nutrition?
1:11:54 Empowering patients with mobile apps and other digital technology, providing real-time information in the context of a backlogged medical system.
1:21:11 What should a medical doctor, medical student, or future medical student do now to gain a practically useful understanding of nutrition?
1:30:58 Disciplines are fragmented and isolated, and desperately need to be connected.
1:35:32 Social media will be the next game-changer in medical education.
1:38:55 How to think about a patient’s nutritional status.
1:41:19 Selenium as an example of where testing can help you navigate equal probabilities of help and harm with supplementation.
1:41:59 Testing nutritional status is valuable because knowledge that a choice is necessary makes the choice more sustainable.
1:44:59 What should patients be doing to get good nutritionally focused medical care?
1:59:07 How you can find the panel members.
Resources Mentioned in “Nutrition in Medical School”
The Ultimate Functional and Integrative Medicine Education Resource
My Masterclass with Masterjohn classes
My Chris Masterjohn Lite videos
My podcast series on measuring and managing nutritional status
The Kresser Institute’s clinician training programs
Re-Find Health (formerly Primal Docs)
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Disclaimer
I am not a medical doctor and this is not medical advice. Nor is this financial or legal advice, nor is anything contained herein to be construed as an explicit accusation against any individual or organization mentioned. My goal is to seek the truth and to empower you with information. Please make all health decisions yourself, consulting sources you trust, including a caring health care professional.
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