Tribune News Network
Doha
In an initiative designed to promote the application of lifestyle medicine in healthcare delivery among healthcare practitioners, Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar (WCM-Q) offered a certificate programme developed by the college’s Institute for Population Health (IPH).
The 60-hour Certificate in Lifestyle Medicine (CLM) provides healthcare professionals with the skills and knowledge to use evidence-based therapeutic lifestyle medicine approaches to prevent and manage lifestyle-related chronic health conditions to reduce morbidity, and complications and suffering associated with the disease.
The evidence-based practice adopts behavioural interventions through positive lifestyle habits such as regular physical activity, eating a balanced whole-food diet, adequate sleep, tobacco cessation, stress management, and other non-drug methods to prevent, treat and manage chronic diseases like obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, hypertension and cancer.
The course is aimed at educating and inspiring healthcare professionals about the preventative and therapeutic role of lifestyle medicine, and its impacts in helping to improve health outcomes, reduce healthcare costs and reshape the delivery of healthcare to make it more holistic and sustainable.
The latest edition of the course was delivered by local and international speakers and the programme attracted participants from Qatar and overseas.
The speakers were Dr Javaid Sheikh, dean of WCM-Q; Dr Ravinder Mamtani, WCM-Q professor of population health sciences and vice dean for population health and lifestyle medicine, and professor of medicine at the Center for Global Health; Dr Sohaila Cheema, associate professor of clinical population health sciences and assistant dean at IPH; Dr Ahmad Al Mulla,senior consultant of public health and disease control, and director of Hamad Medical Corporation’s (HMC)Tobacco Control Center.
Other speakers included Simon Matthews, adjunct lecturer, Avondale University of Lifestyle Medicine and Health Research Centre, Australia; Sarah Burshan, psychologist and learning support specialist at WCM-Q; Dr Shahrad Taheri, senior consultant in endocrinology at HMC; Dr Benjamin Kligler, national director of the Integrative Health Coordinating Center for the Veterans Health Administration, professor of family and community medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, USA; Dr Wayne Dysinger, lifestyle medicine physician, USA; and Stephan Herzog, executive director, American and International Boards of Lifestyle Medicine, USA.
The topics discussed included the relationship between lifestyle health and non-communicable disease patterns, healthy diets and their benefits, healthy food choices and labels, healthy behavior change and cognitive-behavioral therapy, positive psychology in clinical practice, healthy behaviors which support connectedness, mental and emotional well-being, health hazards of tobacco use, health benefits of physical activity, micronutrients and nutritional supplements, , and Lifestyle Medicine approach for chronic disease management, besides others.