Provision of Dietary Education in UK-based Cardiac Rehabilitation: A Cross-sectional Survey Conducted in Conjunction with the British Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation

Emily James*, Tom Butler, Simon Nichols, Stuart Goodall, Alasdair F. O'Doherty

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (journal)peer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
22 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Dietary education is a core component of cardiac rehabilitation (CR). It is unknown how or what dietary education is delivered across the UK. We aimed to characterise practitioners who deliver dietary education in UK CR and determine the format and content of the education sessions. A fifty-four-item survey was approved by the British Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation (BACPR) committee and circulated between July and October 2021 via two emails to the BACPR mailing list and on social media. Practitioners providing dietary education within CR programmes were eligible to respond. Survey questions encompassed: practitioner job title and qualifications, resources, and the format, content and individual tailoring of diet education. Forty-nine different centres responded. Nurses (65·1 %) and dietitians (55·3 %) frequently provided dietary education. Practitioners had no nutrition-related qualifications in 46·9 % of services. Most services used credible resources to support their education, and 24·5 % used BACPR core competencies. CR programmes were mostly community based (40·8 %), lasting 8 weeks (range: 2-25) and included two (range: 1-7) diet sessions. Dietary history was assessed at the start (79·6 %) and followed up (83·7 %) by most centres; barriers to completing assessment were insufficient time, staffing or other priorities. Services mainly focused on the Mediterranean diet while topics such as malnutrition and protein intake were lower priority topics. Service improvement should focus on increasing qualifications of practitioners, standardisation of dietary assessment and improvement in protein and malnutrition screening and assessment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)880-893
Number of pages14
JournalBritish Journal of Nutrition
Volume131
Issue number5
Early online date23 Oct 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • Cardiac rehabilitation
  • dietetics
  • education
  • health service
  • Cardiac Rehabilitation
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Diet
  • Cardiovascular Diseases/prevention & control
  • Humans
  • United Kingdom
  • Malnutrition

Research Centres

  • Cardio-Respiratory Research Centre

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