4.5 Review

Nutritional Knowledge, Confidence, Attitudes towards Nutritional Care and Nutrition Counselling Practice among General Practitioners

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10112222

Keywords

nutritional care; primary health care; physicians; non-communicable diseases; nutritional assessment

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General practitioners need to have adequate nutritional knowledge, positive attitudes, and confidence to effectively provide nutritional counseling services. Studies show that GPs vary in their nutrition knowledge assessments and self-confidence in nutrition counseling skills, and face various barriers that impact their nutritional counseling practice. Health policies aimed at overcoming barriers and creating a supportive environment for GPs to implement nutrition counseling strategies efficiently are key to improving the quality and quantity of nutritional counseling.
Nutritional care represents any practice provided by a health professional, aimed to improve the patient's health outcomes by influencing patient's dietary habits. Clearly, dietitians are the ones supposed to provide top-quality nutrition care, but their services are often inaccessible to many for various reasons. This obliges general practitioners (GPs) in primary health care to provide nutritional counselling to their patients to a certain extent. Preconditions to successful nutritional counselling are GPs with adequate nutritional knowledge, positive attitudes towards nutrition and nutritional care, self-confident and competent in nutritional counselling. Therefore, the aim of this review is to summarise currently available information on nutritional knowledge, confidence and attitudes towards nutritional care and nutrition counselling practice of GPs, as well as barriers towards provision of nutritional counselling. GPs do not consistently obtain satisfying results in nutrition knowledge assessments and their self-confidence in nutrition counselling skills varies. Studies suggest that nutritional counselling practice still has not met its full potential, and GPs frequently report various barriers that impair nutritional counselling practice. Thus, health policies that help overcome barriers and create stimulating environment for GPs to implement nutrition counselling strategies efficiently are the key to improving quality and quantity of nutritional counselling.

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