Culinary medicine and healthy ageing: a comprehensive review.

Nutr Res Rev

Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Navarra, IdiSNA, Pamplona, Spain.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Culinary medicine (CM) is a new approach aimed at promoting healthy aging by combining nutritional education with cooking skills training.
  • A review of 14 CM programs targeting participants over 40 revealed that while these programs had limited success in improving psychosocial outcomes, they effectively enhanced dietary intake and health-related results when they lasted at least 5 months and used multi-group study designs.
  • Important factors for success included well-optimized culinary curricula, the involvement of chefs, and various educational activities like cooking classes and individualized counseling.

Article Abstract

Culinary medicine (CM) represents a novel strategy to promote healthy ageing, as it improves adherence to healthy dietary patterns by providing nutritional education and training in cooking skills. We conducted a comprehensive review of the current scientific literature (2011-2022) concerning CM programmes implemented among participants over the age of 40. This review includes fourteen culinary-nutritional interventions. Each CM programme was analysed according to seven variables: health goal, study design, theoretical basis of the intervention, intervention duration, main outcomes, culinary intervention and the effectiveness of intervention. Although CM programmes showed low effectiveness in achieving positive results on psychosocial outcomes, they were successful in improving dietary intake and health-related outcomes. The interventions lasting for at least 5 months and employing study designs with two or more groups seemed to be important factors associated with achieving significant results. Significant results were observed regardless of the prevention phase defined as the health objective of the CM programme. The use of theoretical frameworks as an educational resource did not influence the effectiveness of the interventions. Other variables such as the inclusion of culinary outcomes, the optimisation of the culinary curriculum taught to the participants and the participation of a chef in the intervention are factors that should be taken into account. In addition, several educational components (cooking classes, hands-on cooking, free food delivery, individualized counselling) were promising for achieving health outcomes in ageing people. Our review has shown that CM programmes can be a powerful tool to improve the health status of ageing people.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954422423000148DOI Listing

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