1. Public nutrition: Why, What, How?
- Author
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Rogers, Beatrice Lorge
- Abstract
Public Nutrition is a field of professional study and practice that has existed for many years without being named as such. It encompasses the disciplines that deal with factors affecting the food consumption and nutritional outcomes of populations, and goes beyond the definition of Public Health Nutrition by including the study of public policy in areas outside of health and nutrition as traditionally defined, that nonetheless can have profound effects on nutrition. Career paths in Public Nutrition exist at a variety of professional levels, including practitioners and direct service providers; administrators and planners; policy makers; and researchers and educators. The professional preparation of those working in Public Nutrition typically combines education and experience in nutritional science, social science, and sometimes management and planning. The field of Public Nutrition is important in providing a critical link between advances in understanding biomedical determinants of nutrition and the application of such understanding in programs and policies. However, the study of Public Nutrition goes beyond this: it represents an agenda of research and practice in its own right. Public Nutrition includes the study of how specific policies, in varying contexts, affect food consumption and nutrition outcomes; it includes the study of determinants of program effectiveness in improving these outcomes. Specific training programs in Public Nutrition do exist; the elements of a curriculum in Public Nutrition include social science research skills (data collection, management, analysis and interpretation), an understanding of economic, social, political, and behavioral determinants of food consumption, health and nutrition; a grounding in nutritional science. Field experience is an essential part of the preparation of Public Nutrition professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2001
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