โMedical schools talk about nutrition but fail to teach it,โ the health secretary said.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Education Secretary Linda McMahon are calling on medical schools to provide nutrition education to students, pointing to data that many medical students receive less than two hours of nutrition instruction.
Nutrition requirements should be embedded across various facets of schooling for medical students, including the medical licensing examination and residency, officials said on Aug. 27.
โMedical schools talk about nutrition but fail to teach it,โ Kennedy said in a statement. โWe demand immediate, measurable reforms to embed nutrition education across every stage of medical training, hold institutions accountable for progress, and equip every future physician with the tools to prevent diseaseโnot just treat it.โ
A poor diet can lead to serious health problems, such as heart disease. Each year, more than 1 million Americans die from diet-related diseases, government nutrition experts have said.
โWe pour more than four trillion dollars annually into treating these preventable diseases, and we continue to graduate physicians unprepared to confront their root cause,โ Kennedy said in a video statement.
Researchers in a 2015 paper found that 71 percent of U.S. medical schools provided fewer than 25 hours of nutrition instruction. A 2023 study based on a survey of medical students found that they reported an average of 1.2 hours of nutrition education per year.
The Association of American Medical Colleges, a nonprofit, said this month that schools and other institutions have provided insufficient nutrition training, but that more recent data show there has been an increase in education and experiences related to nutrition. The organization cited how more than 90 percent of American and Canadian medical schools that responded to a survey said they provided education on nutrition-related topics, such as obesity and food access.
The data โdemonstrate that while nutrition education has achieved universal inclusion in medical school curricula,โ it said, โfew schools have implemented nutrition as a fully integrated longitudinal thread throughout their curricula.โ
Kennedy and McMahon said the improvements are not enough.