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This article explores the ethical considerations and training in the dietetics profession, including the unique body of knowledge, selective entry process, dedication to social service, and self-governing rules. It also discusses the education and professional growth stages in the field.
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The Profession – Training & Education HNU 185 Dr. L. Wadsworth
Professions • Founded on ethical considerations instead of techniques or tools used • fulfill society’s needs
The Dietetics Profession • 1. Clearly defined field of expertise • Unique body of knowledge • 2. Period of prescribed education or training precedes entry into membership • Undergraduate degree and competency attainment
The Dietetics Profession • 3. Selective process of entry into the profession • Training requirements, documentation of competence, and registration exam • 4. Procedure for testing and licensing • Registration exam and annual renewal of license • 5. Dedication of profession to social service • Foundation in sense of social responsibility – rooted in issues of hunger and food insecurity
The Dietetics Profession • 6. Service as primary motivation instead of income/wealth • Provision of service to a client • 7. Provision of adequate services for all • Focus on vulnerable populations • 8. Differential fees for service based on ability to pay • Not generally fee based
The Dietetics Profession • 9. Set of self governing rules • Professional standards including code of ethics and service at high levels of competence • 10. Means of self-surveillance • Professional standards and regulatory association; penalties for misbehavior or negligence of members
Education of Nutrition Professionals • Combination of classroom & experiential learning needed for eligibility • Degree course began in 1902
Stages in Professional Growth Chambers, D.W., Gilmore, C.J., O’Sullivan Maillet, J., Mitchell, B.E. (1996)
Education • Preparing leaders on issues related to food and nutritional needs • Leaders in promoting health • Have diverse, rewarding and novel roles • Food and nutrition education is accessible, flexible, inclusive, & innovative • Adapted from Vision 2020, 2008
Educational Standards • CDA/DC established common standards in essential courses • Core courses • physical & biological sciences • applied sciences • social sciences • others
Educational Standards • University accreditation by DC • Continuing Education • planned, organized learning that builds on present knowledge • lifelong learning • workshops, conferences, articles, journal clubs, study guides
Educational Programs • Undergraduate programs at 16 Universities in Canada
Post-degree Training • Dietetic Internships • 1-year experience • integrated internships • Graduate degree + competencies • Dietetic Residency
Graduate Education • Master’s nutrition degree 9 universities in Canada • Other master’s degrees accepted by DC
Competencies • Statements of performance expected of beginning practitioners • Specific to environments where practitioners perform independently – not in educational setting • Integrate understanding, performance, and values
Competencies • Professional Practice • Assessment • Planning • Implementation • Evaluation • Communication http://www.dietitians.ca/pdf/Competencies_for_Entry-level_Dietitian.pdf
Renewing Competencies • Foundational knowledge • Integrate a unique body of knowledge in all practice activities • Professional practice • Demonstrate professional integrity in all aspects of practice • Communication and collaboration • Communicate effectively and practice collaboratively • Nutrition care • Provide services to meet the nutrition-care needs of individual • Health promotion • Lead and collaborate to promote the nutritional health of individuals, groups, communities, and populations • Management • Manage food and nutrition services and programs
Registration & Licensure • Provincial dietetics association requirements • Education needs • Experience needs • Nationally established exam • Annual license renewal • Payment of fees • Documented continuing education
Ethics and Standards • Code of Ethics • “proclaims ideals of the profession” • Aspirational code • Code of Conduct/Standards of Practice • “supplements code of ethics” • List behaviours to follow to avoid misconduct • ICDA, 2007
Change to Course Outline • Change to University Policy • Requires that 40% of grade for 100 and 200 level courses come from the December exam • Final Exam will be – 40% • Midterm Exam will be – 15%
DC Code of Ethics • http://www.dietitians.ca/public/content/career_in_nutrition/code_of_ethics.asp • NSDA Code of Ethics • https://www.nsdassoc.ca/images/documents/documents/C%20of%20E%202007.pdf • DC Standards of Practice • http://www.dietitians.ca/public/content/career_in_nutrition/standards_of_practice.asp
Ethics • The part of philosophy that deals with morals, duty and judgment” • The World Book Dictionary, 1986 • Further reading on ethics • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics
Ethics • “. . . Ethics is concerned about what is right, fair, just or good, about what we ought to do, not just about what is the case or what is most acceptable or expedient.” • Preston (1996). Understanding Ethics. Sydney, Australia: The Federation Press. • Context dependent
Principles underlying ethics • Autonomy • Independent actions and choices of individuals and communities not to be constrained by others • Non-Maleficence • Duty not to inflict evil, harm or risk of harm on others
Principles underlying ethics • Beneficence • Duty to help others by doing what is best for them • Confidentiality • Information given by another will not be revealed to any other person without permission
Principles underlying ethics • Distributive Justice • Resources, especially scarce resources, ought to be allocated fairly • Integrity • Honesty and that information provided is accurate
Code of Ethics • The Code of Ethics was developed by Dietitians of Canada and officially adopted by the provincial dietetic associations and regulatory bodies • http://www.dietitians.ca/public/content/career_in_nutrition/code_of_ethics.asp
Proposed International Code of Ethics for Dietetics • Being competent, objective & honest in our actions • Respectingall people & their needs • Collaborating with others • Ensuring positive nutrition outcomes for people • Adhering to the standards of good practice in nutrition & dietetics
Code of Conduct or Standards of Practice • “Attempt to set minimum national or international standards for practice” • “Place boundaries on the way that professions undertake their work” • Type of quality assurance • Outlining expected standard of care across the profession • ICDA, 2007
Code of Conduct or Standards of Practice • Differs from Code of Ethics: • More detailed information about how required to act in particular situations • Usually includes disciplinary proceedings or sanctions for failure to follow standards
Professional Standards • http://www.dietitians.ca/public/content/career_in_nutrition/standards_of_practice.asp • Accreditation • Competencies • Professional Standards for Dietitians -- factsheet • http://www.dietitians.ca/public/content/career_in_nutrition/prof_standards_factsheet.asp • Practice supporting role papers
Six Professional Standards • Provision of service to a client • Unique body of knowledge • Competent application of knowledge • Continued competence • Ethics • Professional responsibility and accountability http://www.dietitians.ca/career/i5.htm
Dietitian Protected title Registered dietitian, professional dietitian, and dietitian provincial regulatory bodies can use one of the following designations -- RD, RDt or PDt (or the French equivalent Dt.P.). Nutritionist Not always a protected title May often be used when working in the community Nomenclature
Emerging Trends & Innovations in Practice • More dietitians in PHC • Industry dietitians • Entrepreneurs – spa, school, life coach, camps, media (TV, radio, paper print, web based) • Others
Where do nutrition professionals work? • Employment survey • 1 year from internship • Average 2 months to find employment • 90% employed in 1 year • 95% jobs in related field • 51% full-time + 20% full-time from multiple jobs
Principal employer 43% general or acute care hospitals 17% non-acute care 14% business or industry 11% in community, public health, home care 15% other (i.e. self employed, schools, non-profit) Sector 54% clinical dietetics 16% administrative 14% community, public health and home care 15% other (education, sales, etc) Where do nutrition professionals work? (1997/98)
Nutrition professionals as entrepreneurs… • Respond to environmental and consumer changes • 1994 – 14% vs. 1997/98 - 28% employed in business, industry, private practice • Relationships with entrepreneurship: • Self-efficacy • Entrepreneurial experiences • Dietetic internship • Belief in importance of business skills
Required Reading • Anderson. (1998). Reflection on practice: Dietitian as partner or expert?