Doctor's Orders: Getting Tomorrow's Medics Cooking
Meet the doctors and medical students who want more training on diet and nutrition. Presented by Sheila Dillon.
The NHS is at crisis point. Despite the diet books, the fitness videos, the health bloggers, in 2016, Public Health England estimated that Illness associated with lifestyle costs the NHS £11 billion every year.
But are we missing something obvious? Could we bring down the cost to the taxpayer, reduce pressure on the health system, with simple advice on what we should eat and drink when we go to see our GP?
A growing group of medical professionals think so. Meet the doctors demanding better training on food and nutrition for students at medical school; Dr Rangan Chatterjee (BBC One's Doctor In The House), Dr Michael Mosley, (BBC Two's Trust Me I'm a Doctor) and Dr Rupy Aujla (The Doctor's Kitchen) and many more, all believe that if tomorrow's doctors were taught more about nutrition and diet, it could have a transformative effect on the health of the UK.
In this programme Professor Sumantra Ray, doctor and founding chair of NNEdPro Global Centre for Nutrition and Health describes a decade of work which could soon see widespread training for trainee doctors. And Sheila Dillon meets the students taking the conversation about food and health into their own hands.
Presented by Sheila Dillon
Produced by Clare Salisbury
Photo credit Neil Macaninch (above).
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Sheila Dillon |
| Interviewed Guest | Rangan Chatterjee |
| Interviewed Guest | Michael Mosley |
| Interviewed Guest | Rupy Aujla |
| Interviewed Guest | Sumantra Ray |
| Producer | Clare Salisbury |
Broadcasts
- Sun 25 Mar 201812:32BBC Radio 4
- Mon 26 Mar 201815:30BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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The Food Programme
Investigating every aspect of the food we eat



