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Inspiring Medical Students to Choose Primary Care Through Lifestyle Medicine Education

Authors :
Regan A Stiegmann
David I Bermejo
Source :
Am J Lifestyle Med
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Despite a growing interest in lifestyle medicine, students at most medical schools in the United States are not receiving enough nutrition education and training in the principles of lifestyle modification to be effective at applying this knowledge to real-world clinical practice. Moreover, the rising prevalence of chronic lifestyle-related diseases and the increasing deficit of primary care providers is overwhelming the US health care system. The need for primary care physicians is being circumvented by medical students’ diminishing interest in primary care partly due to concerns about salary, prestige, and being too broad in focus. Students may also recognize that the pharmaceutically based management of chronic conditions and supplemental lifestyle recommendations are often fraught with nonadherence, resulting in the progression of disease states. However, some medical schools have incorporated the concepts and practice of lifestyle medicine into their curriculums. This integration has the potential to inspire medical students to choose a primary care specialty, because students become more adept at addressing and treating the root causes of chronic disease. Lifestyle medicine education can empower students interested in primary care to fulfill their initial desires to treat and heal that may have inspired them to want to become doctors in the first place.

Details

ISSN :
15598284
Volume :
14
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of lifestyle medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e063fed089fccefb89f0b3add5381e18