Nurses who have an appreciation for nutritional health practitioners are able to share healthy tips toward the fight against chronic diseases, including obesity.
Obesity, Nutrition and Nursing Practitioners by Dr. Cynthia J. Hickman
1. FBCBNA ANNUAL WOMEN’S HEALTH SYMPOSIUM
Dr. Cynthia J. Hickman, Ph.D., RN., MSN/Ed.
Practitioner of Nutrition & Nursing Education
2018
Topic: Obesity, Nutrition, and Nursing Practitioners
2. DISCLAIMER
This presentation is intended for educational purposes only and does
not replace independent professional judgment.
3. OBJECTIVE
To enhance knowledge of nutrition in nurse practitioners
and the application of such knowledge to the maintenance
of personal nutritional health and prevention of disease
shared in an atmosphere of professional congeniality.
4. INTRODUCTION
Nutrition is defined as the science of food and its relationship to
health.
Primarily concerned with nutrients that fuels our body for:
Growth
Development
Maintenance
Good nutrition means “maintaining a nutritional balance that
enables us to enjoy good health.
5. YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT...TRUE OR FALSE?
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6. DO WE VALUE NUTRITION?
In the past few decades, there has been increasing
recognition of the value of prevention using nutrition as the
catalyst.
Public interest in nutrition is on the rise d/t soaring
healthcare costs(mostly associated with chronic diseases).
Solution: healthy lifestyle behaviors
Phiri, .P., Draper, C., E., Lamber, E. V., Kolbe-Alexander, T., L. (2014). Nurses' lifestyle behaviors, health priorities and barriers to living a healthy lifestyle: A qualitative
descriptive study. BMC Nursing, 13 (1), 38
7. It showed that nursing students and RNs have an average BMI of 27.6(overweight range)
Participants responses:
28% of the participants responded that healthy food choices were not available during
work hours
31% said their workplace did not offer nutrition and weight management classes and
counseling
38% felt that healthy food prices were not comparable to other food prices at work
America Nurses Association(ANA) Health
Risk Survey
ANA(2016). http://nursingworld.org/HRA-Executive-Summary
8.
9. HUMAN BEHAVIOR
Human behavior is believed to be influenced by these 2 systems:
Organisms with complex nervous systems have greater capacity to learn and adjust
behavior.
Gregory, A (2015). Book of Alan: A Universal Order. ISBN 978-1-5144-2053-9.
Tortora, G.J., & Derrickson, B. (2016). Principles of Anatomy and Physiology (15th edition). J. Wiley
Endocrine
System
Nervous
System
10. OLD PROVERBIAL PHASES
We eat to live, not live to eat
or
Actions speak louder than words
Benham, W. Gurney (1926). Putnam's Complete Book of Quotations, Proverbs, and Household Words. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.
11. BARRIERS TO NURSES EATING HEALTHY
Work schedules (7-3)(3-11) (11-7) (7-7) (8-4)(per diem) (w/ends)
Individual barriers( lack of rest & sleep) (smoking and alcohol use)
Aspects of the physical workplace environment(cafeteria closed)
Social eating practices (bad habits)
Overall, the workplace exerted a negative influence on nurses’ dietary intake.
Nicholls R., Perry L., Duffield C., Gallagher R.& Pierce H. (2017) Barriers and facilitators to healthy eating for nurses in the workplace: an integrative review. Journal of Advanced
Nursing 73(5), 1051–1065. doi: 10.1111/jan.13185
12. MISSING MEALS LEAD TO OBESITY
A recent study supported by the federal Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality showed that nurses routinely miss meals to
care for patients.
Skipping meals also may lead to cravings and sudden blood glucose
spikes.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (2009). .Skipping meals or breaks may contribute to nurse burnout and jeopardize nurses’
health. www.ahrq.gov/research/mar05/0305RA4.htm.
13.
14. THE STRUGGLE IS REAL!
Nurses struggle with nutrition, just like the rest of the
U.S. population. Nurses face special challenges with
healthy eating due in part, to shiftwork, limited
workplace food options, and unpredictable meal breaks.
So….what do we do about this…
American Nurses Association [ANA] & Insight Consulting Group [ICG]. (2016). Health risk appraisal exploratory data analysis: November 30, 2016
15. THE ROLE OF NURSES AND THEIR NUTRITION HEALTH
ONE WORD:
Ownership!
17. WATCH YOUR SUGAR
Reed, D. (2014. Healthy Eating for Healthy Nurses: Nutrition Basics to Promote Health for Nurses and Patients. The Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,19(3), Manuscript 7.
….Did You Know..
56 Different Names for Sugar
24. A BALANCED EATING FOUNDATION
Balanced eating has a foundation based in three core areas:
Physical: what you eat nourishes your body
Emotional: what you eat brings pleasure and joy
Spiritual: what you choose to eat comes from listening to your body
beyond the rule or compulsion
26. American Nurses Association.(2016). http://nursingworld.org/HRA-Executive-Summary
Benham, W. Gurney (1926). Putnam's Complete Book of Quotations, Proverbs, and Household Words. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.
Darch, J., Baillie, L., Gillison, F. (2017).Nurses as role models in health promotion: a concept analysis, British Journal of Nursing, 2017, 26, 17, 982
Gregory, A (2015). Book of Alan: A Universal Order. ISBN 978-1-5144-2053-9.
Hickman, C. (2016) Dissertation (Influences of Nutritional Food Label Understanding in African American with Obesity.
https://search.proquest.com/openview/1c459e82ade69b53e1de95f3ba248769/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y
National Health Advisory. (2016). Good fats and bad fats. Retrieved from https://health.gov/dietaryguidelines/2015/guidelines/
Nicholls R., Perry L., Duffield C., Gallagher R.& Pierce H. (2017) Barriers and facilitators to healthy eating for nurses in the workplace: an integrative
review. Journal of Advanced Nursing 73(5), 1051–1065. doi: 10.1111/jan.13185
Phiri, .P., Draper, C., E., Lamber, E. V., Kolbe-Alexander, T., L. (2014). Nurses' lifestyle behaviors, health priorities and barriers to living a healthy
lifestyle: A qualitative descriptive study. BMC Nursing, 13 (1), 38.
Tortora, G.J., & Derrickson, B. (2016). Principles of Anatomy and Physiology (15th edition). J. Wiley
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and U.S. Department of Agriculture. 2015–2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. 8th Edition.
December 2015. Available at http://health.gov/dietaryguidelines/2015/guidelines/.
REFERENCES
27. THANK YOU
Contact Information:
Dr. Cynthia J. Hickman(Dr.CynthiaSpeaks)
https://cynthiajhickman.info/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-cynthia-j-hickman-8377871b/
https://www.facebook.com/DrCynthiaSpeaks/
https://twitter.com/Shuggga
cjhbeh@msn.com
Editor's Notes
Proverbial phrase….How many times have we heard we eat to live, not live to eat?
. It is most commonly believed that complexity in the behavior of an organism is correlated to the complexity of its nervous system. Generally,