Is your doctor your go-to for nutrition advice? Neither is mine. And why would I expect that?
Fewer than a quarter of doctors say they've had sufficient training to provide nutritional advice to their patients, according to
recent polls
For the American medical profession to live up to that, there'd have to be more than
one doctor
That's
beginning to change
Would-be doctors at Tulane aren't just learning about nutrition. They're learning how to cook.
Dr. Timothy Harlan, known in the food media world as
Dr. Gourmet
"Physicians talk about nutrition and diet all the time, but they don't talk about it in a way that communicates change to their patients," Harlan says,
in a video
The students learn to make the most of low-cost ingredients, so they can cater to low-income communities. And Harlan says the school also provides cooking classes to practicing doctors and the public.
These skills are sorely needed in New Orleans. In 2010, 64 percent of adults
were classified as obese or overweight
"We know from the literature that when people go home and start cooking from real ingredients for themselves that their health improves," Harlan says. "We also know that they don't really know how to do that."
Cheryl Spann took part in the community cooking class, and says she's learned what good carbs are and how to cut back on sugar.
"My health is getting so much better now," Spann says in the school's video. "And I do believe that when I see my primary care physician in the next month, I will no longer be taking hypertensive medicine and I will no longer be taking diabetes medicine."
Tulane's medical school was among the first to take on a licensed chef as an instructor. Its curriculum,
developed in partnership
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