Fierce Healthcare (06/08/26) Muoio, Dave
The Trump administration's push to expand nutrition education in medical training has grown to include 73 medical schools and eight major accreditation and assessment bodies. Officials said that schools voluntarily committed to adding at least 40 hours of nutrition instruction or an equivalent competency beginning this fall. New participants — including Texas A&M, the University of Massachusetts and the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center — joined after the initial March announcement, which had secured 53 schools. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called the expanding coalition a structural shift, noting that accrediting organizations such as the National Board of Medical Examiners and the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners will incorporate measurable nutrition-related changes, with those two organizations dedicating about 15% of exam content to nutrition and its clinical application. Officials stressed that schools will not face financial penalties for falling short and will retain flexibility in curriculum design. The initiative also includes a $2.1 million National Institutes of Health challenge to identify and scale effective nutrition-education models, while Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz highlighted incentives tied to nutrition strategies in federal funding decisions and praised hospital efforts to improve patient menus.
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