Washington Administrative Code
Title 246 - Health, Department of
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS AND LICENSING
Chapter 246-822 - Dieticians or nutritionists
Section 246-822-135 - Dietitian minimum core curriculum
Universal Citation: WA Admin Code 246-822-135
Current through Register Vol. 24-24, December 15, 2024
(1) To apply for certification as a dietitian by completing a core curriculum, an applicant shall successfully complete a bachelor's degree or higher from an accredited college or university with coursework that includes at least the following topics:
(a) Research skills, including
methodology and interpretation or research literature;
(b) Science of nutrition and dietetics,
including organic chemistry, biochemistry, anatomy, physiology, pharmacology,
genetics, microbiology, nutrient metabolism, and nutrition across the
lifespan;
(c) Implementation of the
nutrition care process, and principles of medical nutrition therapy;
(d) Food science, food safety and sanitation,
and recipe and menu development;
(e) Effective education and counseling
techniques;
(f) Public health
policy, including legislative and regulatory structures, and health equity;
and
(g) Professional practice
skills, including professional ethics, client communication, documentation
standards, coding and billing practices, and health care delivery
systems.
(2) A didactic program in dietetics accredited by ACEND satisfies the requirements of this section.
(3) For the purpose of this section, the nutrition care process in subsection (1)(c) of this section includes all the following concepts:
(a)
"Nutrition assessment" means assessing and evaluating the nutritional needs of
individuals and groups using anthropometric, biochemical, nutrigenomic,
clinical, metabolic, physiologic, dietary, and behavioral, social and
demographic data for clinical, research and program planning purposes; and,
determining resources in the practice setting, including ordering laboratory
tests to check and track nutrition status and monitor effectiveness of
nutrition plans or orders.
(b)
"Nutrition care services" means and involves nutrition care, medical nutrition
therapy, and nutrition-related services using knowledge, evidence-based
practices, and clinical judgment to address health promotion and wellness, and
prevention and management of acute or chronic diseases and conditions for
individuals and groups. Nutrition care services involves using the four
interrelated steps of the nutrition care process including nutrition
assessment, nutrition diagnosis, nutrition intervention, and nutrition
monitoring and evaluation.
(c)
"Nutrition counseling" means the provision of dietary and nutrition counseling
and education with the goal of facilitating knowledge, skill, and ability
including concerning disease pathophysiology, clinical and biochemical data and
data patterns, health-related behaviors, lifestyle choices, environmental
factors, food and dietary patterns, nutrient and prescription drug
interactions; provision of education and training on nutrition-related medical
devices; and the development and administration of nutrition care
standards.
(d) "Nutrition
diagnosis" means identifying and labeling nutrition problems. It does not
include the medical differential diagnosis of the health status of an
individual.
(e) "Nutrition
intervention" means purposefully planned actions and counseling intended to
positively change a nutrition-related behavior, risk factor, environmental
condition or aspect of the health status for an individual, including education
and training on nutrition-related medical devices.
(i) Nutrition intervention includes using
approved clinical privileges, physician/nonphysician practitioner-driven orders
(i.e., delegated orders), protocols, or other facility-specific processes for
order writing or for provision of nutrition-related services consistent with
applicable specialized training, competence, medical staff, or organizational
policy.
(ii) Nutrition intervention
involves implementing, initiating, or modifying orders for therapeutic diets,
medication and nutrition interactions, management, or nutrition-related
services (e.g., medical foods/nutrition dietary supplements, food texture
modifications, enteral and parenteral nutrition, intravenous infusions,
laboratory tests, medications, and education and counseling).
(f) "Nutrition monitoring and
evaluation" means identifying patient outcomes using data sources and
technology-based applications relevant to the nutrition diagnosis and comparing
the outcomes with the patient's previous health status, interventions, goals or
reference standards to determine the progress made in achieving desired
outcomes or nutrition care and whether planned interventions should be
continued or revised.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Washington may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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