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PHPS40050

Academic Year 2024/2025
The overall aim is to ensure that the student develops an understanding of the relationship between nutritional exposure with non-communicable disease, and the methods of researching this relationship. The module is designed for students who have a good knowledge of basic nutritional science, and through lectures and course work they will develop a greater understanding of how diet-disease associations are determined and how we identify changes in nutritional status in large groups or populations. The goal of the module is to provide students with the necessary skills to develop effective strategies and policies to improve public health nutrition
The module will begin with an overview of the historical significance of nutritional epidemiological studies and how they have served to develop the field. Students will build on their existing nutritional knowledge to examine the identification of food groups and sources of nutrients for diets in different populations; the information and skills developed will then be utilised to examine the contribution of foods and nutrients to health and disease. Appropriate nutritional exposures and outcomes for epidemiological purposes will be considered in relation to specific population groups, study designs and research and/or public health goals.
Students will build on their prior learning of nutritional assessment to consider the application of appropriate methods for measurement of nutritional status in public health, and also in the development and utility of the standards and references used for identifying health and nutritional status. The ability to derive food and nutrient intakes from dietary assessment will be further developed with a specific emphasis on data management and treatment. The module will involve in class activities which will develop student skills in recognising the types and sources of error in nutritional data, proposing design and analytical solutions to measurement error, and being able to assess the impact of measurement error on study findings.
These skills will enable students to critically appraise the strength of the evidence for diet and chronic disease and be able to appreciate the contribution of evidence from observational, experimental and intervention studies to understanding diet-disease associations. The module will also consider the sources of evidence for identifying populations at risk of malnutrition (both over and under nutrition) including surveillance mechanisms. Finally students will learn to recognise how evidence from nutritional epidemiology can be used to influence, formulate and evaluate policy.


All assessment components must be completed in order to pass the module.

About this Module

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Student Effort Hours:
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Requirements, Exclusions and Recommendations

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Module Requisites and Incompatibles
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Assessment Strategy  
Description Timing Component Scale Must Pass Component % of Final Grade In Module Component Repeat Offered

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Carry forward of passed components
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Remediation Type Remediation Timing

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Please see Student Jargon Buster for more information about remediation types and timing. 

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