Nutrition in Patient Engagement
- Aug 20, 2023
- 3 min read
Author: Harvey Warren, Co-Founder
Originally published on Risk and Insurance
Aug 21, 2023

And let medicine be thy food. Said by Hippocrates a very, very long time ago, but it comes as breaking news in the evolving understanding of patient engagement. Nutrition is the first of the four cards that can be played to address the “wildcard” of patient engagement in the recovery process. If you spend more than five minutes on social media you will read or hear about a dozen different eating strategies, diet plans, foods you must eat, and foods you must never eat frustrating even the most discerning reader. Beyond the admonition to not eat “junk food”, there is very little to no support given to educating the injured worked on how nutrition is key to getting better faster and staying better longer.
Patient education and injury recovery coaching became a passion of mine after a car accident a dozen years ago. Until that point in my life, in my late 50’s, I had never had any surgical procedure other than a tonsillectomy when I was eight years old. Like most injured workers facing the long road back to wellness, I had never walked that road before and had no map to guide me. While attending a fortuitous meeting at a Syracuse University Alumni Association gathering, I met Dr. Kay Stearns Bruening, PhD. RDN, FAND who teaches nutrition at the Falk School of Sport and Human Dynamics. When I shared with her my outline for The Optimized Patient Book, she rolled up her sleeves and shared with me it was about time that recovery strategy included nutritional guidance.
Whenever the subject of nutrition is raised, eyes start to roll thinking about eating wheat grass and becoming a vegan. That was certainly my first concern. But wait a second, if you had a basket of “good stuff,” is there a way that you could make it taste great? Even if the ingredients were not part of your daily consumption, how would you make it taste good like they do on those Food Network™ shows where the basket contains a mix of absurdly challenging ingredients? I challenged Dr. Bruening to compile a list of foods that heal. That began a discussion about the microbiome and phytochemicals that are actually well-known to support enhanced healing. But, those components won’t do any good if the injured worker won’t eat them!
I am fortunate that my wife is a television producer. She introduced me to French Chef, Guillaume Sabbadin, who gladly took the challenge of making Dr. Bruening’s basket of ingredients into a delicious Monday through Friday menu of breakfast, lunch and dinner dishes over the span of four weeks (By the way, if you happen to be in Los Angeles, don't miss his Little French Bakery and skip the trip to Paris). I personally cooked every one of the recipes and turned them into an illustrated menu that even the most unskilled cook can make well. As it turns out, foods that heal are readily available and easy to prepare. We even created videos to support the injured worker on “how to” utilize the menu planner with the caveat that even if only handful of the dishes appeal to you, the benefit will be significant.
For example, have you ever had a Kefir shake? Kefir is a yogurt-based drink when placed in a blender with a banana and some frozen berries, spins up into a powerful concoction to improve your gut bacteria. It is especially effective when you are going to have, or have had anesthesia, antibiotics and/or opioids. All these drugs impede gut performance essential to rapid recovery. You don’t need to be a French Chef to use a blender. Enjoying whole wheat in place of white bread is another strategy to optimize microbiome performance. In my personal experience, of the sixty recipes created by Chef Sabbadin and Dr. Bruening to aid in the healing process, about ten of them have become family favorites because they taste so good. And, yes, the meal plan provides flexibility to eat whatever you want on the weekends. All of the injured workers with whom I have shared these ideas have stunned their doctors with improved rates of recovery and optimized outcomes. Hippocrates was right 2,600 years ago. It’s time for all of us to catch up.





