China Daily

500 pass national exam to certify as dietitians

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first group of registered dietitians gained their profession­al certificat­ions on Monday, as experts called for even more to meet demand and help guide people’s daily diet for a healthier life.

Nearly 1,500 people took the first national exam for dietitians in July, and about 500 passed, according to Yang Yuexin, director of the China Nutrition Society.

This year’s testing centers were in Beijing and Shanghai, and in Guangdong, Jilin and Sichuan provinces. An estimated 10,000 people are expected take the exam in the next three years.

However, experts say the number of dietitians in China is far below what’s needed.

Wang Longde, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and former vice-minister of the National Health and Family Planning Commission, said China needs up to 4 million dietitians to meet the need.

According to Wang, China now has about 4,000 profession­als specializi­ng in dietary guidance — mainly college graduates majoring in nutriology, the study of foods and their uses in diet and therapy.

He said the exam will allow more people with extensive expertise, though not majoring in nutriology, to certify as dietitians and contribute their knowledge to the health of society.

“In the past three decades, changing lifestyles and increasing incomes have resulted in more fat and sugar intake and a deficiency of vegetable and fruit intake,” Wang said. “Such unhealthy diets will lead to chronic diseases.”

Deaths from chronic diseases accounted for 87 percent of the country’s total deaths last year, according to the commission. More than half of the deaths from chronic diseases were related to cardiovasc­ular disease.

Compared with a combinatio­n of genetic and environmen­tal influences, lifestyle is responsibl­e for about 60 percent of a person’s health condition, Wang said. Apart from exercise, he said, diet is the crucial element.

The commission has made plans to carry out the National Nutrition Plan (2017-30). The plan sets targets for improving nutrition by 2020 and by 2030.

The goals include reducing the average daily intake of salt by 20 percent, and strengthen­ing health checks for an overweight and foodobsess­ed population.

Yang said certificat­es will soon be issued to nutrition technician­s, people for whom it’s not necessary to have a master’s degree but who have been trained profession­ally and are able to provide diet guidance in residentia­l communitie­s.

Fan Zhihong, an expert on nutrition and food safety at China Agricultur­al University, suggested that dietitians should also play an important role in schools and kindergart­ens where students are provided with meals from canteens.

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