1. Clinical nutrition knowledge, attitude and practice of medical interns in Shanghai: Contributory factors
- Author
-
Min, Zong, Yan-Qiu, Chen, Xia, Liu, Hua, Xie, Mei-Fang, Zhang, and Jian-Qin, Sun
- Subjects
Male ,China ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Nutritional Sciences ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Female ,Nutrition Therapy - Abstract
To provide a questionnaire, with Shanghai medical interns as respondents, analyzing knowledge (K), attitude (A), and practice (P) in relation to clinical nutrition, and to explore factors that could affect KAP scores.The cross- sectional study used 330 interns from Shanghai medical universities responding to general material data questionnaires and KAP questionnaires on clinical nutrition.The mean KAP score was 210.26±25.9 (X±SD), and the score for each part of the KAP questionnaire was just within the threshold for qualified. Multivariate analysis showed that the factors influencing the proportion of excellent scores for K were preventive medicine major (OR=3.45, p0.001), senior intern (OR=2.52, p=0.002), and tertiary intern hospital (OR=2.31, p=0.006). The only factor influencing the proportion of excellent scores for P was accessing nutritional information one to three times per week (OR=3.95, p=0.011). Nutrition course had no relation to any scores of K, A, P.The mean scores of overall KAP and the individual K, A, P were all categorized as qualified. The P score was the lowest and only influenced by how frequently information was accessed. In summary, nutrition knowledge and regular practical training gained from intern hospital could be a better way to enable senior interns to quickly and competently address patient nutrition problems at the commencement of their careers.
- Published
- 2020