Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T17:27:33.605Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Meta-analysis and machine learning-augmented mixed effects cohort analysis of improved diets among 5847 medical trainees, providers and patients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2021

Dominique J Monlezun*
Affiliation:
Department of Cardiology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, 1400 Pressler Street, Unit 1451, Houston, TX77030, USA Center for Artificial Intelligence & Health Equity, Global System Analytics & Structures, New Orleans, LA, USA
Christopher Carr
Affiliation:
The Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine, Tulane University, School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA
Tianhua Niu
Affiliation:
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Tulane University, School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA
Francesco Nordio
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA
Nicole DeValle
Affiliation:
The Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine, Tulane University, School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA
Leah Sarris
Affiliation:
The Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine, Tulane University, School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA
Timothy Harlan
Affiliation:
GWU Culinary Medicine Program, George Washington School of Medicine & Health Sciences, Washington, DC, USA
*
*Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective:

We sought to produce the first meta-analysis (of medical trainee competency improvement in nutrition counseling) informing the first cohort study of patient diet improvement through medical trainees and providers counseling patients on nutrition.

Design:

(Part A) A systematic review and meta-analysis informing (Part B) the intervention analysed in the world’s largest prospective multi-centre cohort study on hands-on cooking and nutrition education for medical trainees, providers and patients.

Settings:

(A) Medical educational institutions. (B) Teaching kitchens.

Participants:

(A) Medical trainees. (B) Trainees, providers and patients.

Results:

(A) Of the 212 citations identified (n 1698 trainees), eleven studies met inclusion criteria. The overall effect size was 9·80 (95 % CI (7·15, 12·45) and 95 % CI (6·87, 13·85); P < 0·001), comparable with the machine learning (ML)-augmented results. The number needed to treat for the top performing high-quality study was 12. (B) The hands-on cooking and nutrition education curriculum from the top performing study were applied for medical trainees and providers who subsequently taught patients in the same curriculum (n 5847). The intervention compared with standard medical care and education alone significantly increased the odds of superior diets (high/medium v. low Mediterranean diet adherence) for residents/fellows most (OR 10·79, 95 % CI (4·94, 23·58); P < 0·001) followed by students (OR 9·62, 95 % CI (5·92, 15·63); P < 0·001), providers (OR 5·19, 95 % CI (3·23, 8·32), P < 0·001) and patients (OR 2·48, 95 % CI (1·38, 4·45); P = 0·002), results consistent with those from ML.

Conclusions:

The current study suggests that medical trainees and providers can improve patients’ diets with nutrition counseling in a manner that is clinically and cost effective and may simultaneously advance societal equity.

Type
Review Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society

The global obesity epidemic and its related chronic comorbidities including CVD remain the world’s top morbidity causes, with CVD alone accounting for over one in three deaths, despite the clinically effective, cost efficient and societally equitable role of nutrition intervention at reducing the staggering toll of this epidemic(Reference Abubakar, Tillmann and Banerjee1Reference LaVeist, Gaskin and Richard5). Yet, it has outpaced medical education’s response(Reference Ng, Fleming and Robinson6). Although a recent JAMA study identifies diet as a top morbidity and mortality risk factor(Reference Murray, Atkinson and Bhalla7), only a minority of primary care physicians regularly counsel their patients in nutrition or monitor their BMI(Reference Smith, Borowski and Liu8). A central cause appears to be training deficiencies(Reference Lenders, Deen and Bistrian9), as approximately 50 % of paediatricians and internists have inadequate competencies for educating patients on obesity and even basic nutrition(Reference Jay, Gillespie and Ark10). This lack of proficiency appears to stretch back to medical education as three in four medical schools fail to achieve the minimum 25 h of diet training as outlined by the National Academy of Sciences(Reference Adams, Lindell and Kohlmeier11). Accordingly, 81 % of medical students by the time of graduation report they are inadequately equipped to counsel patients on nutrition(Reference Spencer, Frank and Elon12). Increasing evidence underscores the necessity of comprehensive interdisciplinary obesity and nutrition training in medical schools(Reference DiMaria-Ghalili, Mirtallo and Tobin13,Reference Devries, Dalen and Eisenberg14) . But amid the growing push among medical professionals for improved training(Reference Devries, Dalen and Eisenberg14), recent attempts to improve this education through medical schools and residency programmes share several significant limitations that reduce their suitability to contribute to improved training.

Past studies assessing the effectiveness of nutrition education interventions lacked: control groups(Reference Afaghi, Haj Agha Mohamadi and Ziaee15Reference Crowley, Ball and Leveritt22), validated surveys(Reference Devries, Dalen and Eisenberg14,Reference Afaghi, Haj Agha Mohamadi and Ziaee15,Reference Lebensohn, Kligler and Dodds19,Reference Ray, Udumyan and Rajput-Ray23) , longitudinal follow-up(Reference Devries, Dalen and Eisenberg14,Reference Barss, Grivna and Al-Maskari16,Reference Conroy, Delichatsios and Hafler17,Reference Lebensohn, Kligler and Dodds19Reference Schlair, Hanley and Gillespie21) , deliberate practice educating patients(Reference Afaghi, Haj Agha Mohamadi and Ziaee15,Reference Conroy, Delichatsios and Hafler17Reference Crowley, Ball and Leveritt22) , adequate sample sizes(Reference Devries, Dalen and Eisenberg14Reference Kohlmeier, McConathy and Cooksey Lindell18,Reference Lewis, Frank and Nagel20Reference Crowley, Ball and Leveritt22) , causal inference analysis(Reference Afaghi, Haj Agha Mohamadi and Ziaee15Reference Ray, Udumyan and Rajput-Ray23) and the Mediterranean diet (MD)(Reference Devries, Dalen and Eisenberg14Reference Crowley, Ball and Leveritt22). Though one study (Schlair et al. 2012) unlike the others attempted to control for baseline selection bias through multivariable regression, no studies utilised study design or analysis methodology to allow causal inference. Since these studies also fail to feature the most extensively supported diet for patients, the MD(Reference Trichopoulou, Costacou and Bamia24Reference Foroughi, Akhavanzanjani and Maghsoudi27), best practices in nutrition counseling are further limited.

Recent studies additionally omitted two key trends in evidence-based medical education: simulation-based medical education with deliberate practice and comparative effectiveness research. Robust meta-analysis evidence indicates that actively implementing new knowledge and skills produces superior mastery over passively learning material through lectures or even through team learning(Reference McGaghie, Issenberg and Cohen28). These studies also fall short of adhering to the comparative effectiveness research recommendations of the Institute of Medicine attempting to improve research methodologies and thus study validity(Reference Iglehart29). Instead of featuring the comparative effectiveness research prioritisation of testing one treatment effectiveness over another, these recent nutrition studies simply deal with treatment efficacy and thus cannot answer whether the current treatment is superior to prior. Finally, these prior studies are largely silent on two top comparative effectiveness research components of social disparities and healthcare systems, within which treatments are nested and by which they are largely influenced. The paucity of studies with robust programme and methodology strengths thus reduce the evidence-base available to derive effective, equitable health policy on nutrition curriculum guidelines and dissemination of effective models for public health and clinical applications. We therefore sought to produce the first known systematic review and meta-analysis of nutrition education interventions for medical student and resident improvement in their competencies counseling patients in nutrition (part A of this study). It then guided the largest machine learning (ML)-augmented multi-centre prospective cohort study on hands-on cooking and nutrition education to improve medical trainees and providers’ diets and competencies educating patients on nutrition, and thus patient diet and health outcomes (Cooking for Health Optimization for Patients (CHOP), ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03443635) (part B of this study).

Materials and methods

Part A: systematic review and meta-analysis

Systematic search

Papers were considered for inclusion in the current study by first identifying them in the Embase, PubMed and Web of Science databases from January 1, 1994, to March 31, 2018. Papers were located based on pre-defined search terms: diet education, nutrition education, curriculum, classes, modules, online, learning, problem-based learning, medical schools, medical students, students, residents, physicians, medical professionals and health professionals. Author discussion resolved disagreements. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guideline was the standard by which the current study was conducted(Reference Moher, Liberati and Tetzlaff30).

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

The inclusion criteria were applied after detailed consideration of the limited research in this field and the even more pronounced absence of widely accepted treatment models, endpoints and analytic techniques. Studies were included in this systematic review and meta-analysis if they used a pre-post design, tested a nutrition education as treatment, included the outcomes of trainee competencies counseling patients on nutrition and was performed in the 25 years prior to this meta-analysis. Pre-post studies were included given the prevalent absence in the studies of a control group. The date range was selected based on the medical school reforms nationally enacted in 1995 onward that subsequently impacted trainee programmes globally. Studies were excluded if they omitted adequate information on treatment effect and s e, or if there were redundant publications or non-original reports (such as reviews, editorials or meta-analyses). The larger or more recent study by a particular author within the same case series was included as applicable.

Data coding information

The extraction was done by two reviewers separately with disagreement resolved through discussion. The primary outcome was trainee competency educating patients on nutrition. Pre-defined study parameters were identified from the studies meeting criteria through standard form, including study design, primary author, publication year, nation, sample size, time of follow-up and effect size (ES) with the associated 95 % CI.

Study quality scoring criteria

The quality of studies was assessed using the standard forty-point STROBE quality scale independently by two authors (DA and RS)(Reference Gallo, Egger and McCormack31). Studies were categorised according to a level according to their quality scores: low (0–19), moderate (20–29) and high (30–40). Disagreements were resolved by author discussion.

Statistical methods

Mean competency differences were calculated between post and pretest percentages and then divided by the pretest s d to produce the standardised ES for each study. T-test values and df were utilised to calculate ES correlation for studies lacking adequate information to calculate the ES(Reference Borenstein, Hedges and Higgins32). Correlation coefficients were produced by each study’s ES after it was corrected by the sample size as appropriate. The ML technique of random forest multiple imputation was applied to improve performance of the traditional statistical method of standard multiple imputation by chained equations given its demonstrated superior accuracy and efficiency than multiple imputation by chained equations alone(Reference Shah, Bartlett and Carpenter33).

Inverse-variance weighted fixed or DerSimonian and Laird random effects meta-analysis models were initially considered to calculate the pooled estimates and 95 % CI of the correlations(Reference Borenstein, Hedges and Higgins32). Random effects were ultimately selected if significant heterogeneity existed across the individual studies, which was assessed using the I 2 statistic ≥75 % Cochran’s Q-test (P < 0·100)(Reference Higgins, Thompson and Deeks34,Reference Dekks, Higgins and Altman35) . These heterogeneity tests were included given the assumption of the current study that prior nutrition studies for medical trainees would have varying degrees of quality, follow-up times and education interventions(Reference Borenstein, Hedges and Higgins32). Sub-group analysis by study quality was additionally done. Cochran’s Q-test and the I 2 statistic were utilised to compare the sub-group differences with significant heterogeneity detected using a P-value <0·10. Harbord–Egger and Begg–Mazumdar statistical tests were utilised to qualitatively and quantitatively assess publication bias, since this study’s overall ES across the different studies could be inappropriately skewed if studies with smaller p-values or larger sample sizes had greater publication chances(Reference Harbord, Egger and Sterne36,Reference Begg and Mazumdar37) . Both techniques were used since heterogeneity across studies by virtue of their varying study parameters or quality could alone produce non-symmetrical funnel plots, since more symmetrical plots are created by larger ES if there are a greater number of studies which meet criteria for meta-analysis inclusion(Reference Sterne, Egger and Smith38,Reference Egger, Davey Smith and Schneider39) . Publication bias would be controlled for through the Duval and Tweedie nonparametric ‘trim and fill’ method(Reference Duval and Tweedie40). Rank-based data augmentation in this method accounts for studies absent from the published literature to produce estimates of the number of missing studies and the associated ES:

$${R_0} = {\gamma ^*} - 1$$
$${L_0} = \{ 4{S_{rank}}^* - n\;\left( {n + 1} \right)\} \;/\;\left( {2n - 1} \right)$$
$${Q_0} = n - {1 \over 2} - \;\sqrt {2{n^2} - 4{T_n} + 1/4} $$

with ${\gamma ^*}$ indicating the length of the rightmost rank runs, ${S_{rank}}$ indicating the Wilcoxon statistic and n indicating the number of studies when the studies included in the meta-analysis are ranked according to their distance from the pooled effect(Reference Duval and Tweedie40,Reference Duval and Tweedie41) . This adjustment method was selected due to its accepted role within meta-analyses(Reference Carpenter, Rücker and Schwarzer42), its efficient and consistent results(Reference Peters, Sutton and Jones43,Reference Terrin, Schmid and Lau44) , its versatility for smaller data sets(Reference Jin, Zhou and He45), the less defined mathematical justification of its method competitors such as Copas and the corresponding absence of evidence indicating superiority of other methods to this one(Reference Carpenter, Rücker and Schwarzer42). ML was then applied to test performance of the statistical meta-analysis results produced through fixed and random effects. The top algorithm was selected by lowest root relative squared error among the 26 ML algorithms appropriate for the ES continuous outcome, with values < 100 % being more favorably considered and then compared with the traditional meta-analysis results. All above analyses defined as traditional statistical analyses were performed using Stata 14.2 (StataCorp.), and ML analysis was performed with Java 9 (Oracle, Redwood Chores, California, USA)(46). Except as otherwise specified, the significance level was defined at a two tailed P-value of 0·05.

Part B: cohort study

In the second phase of this study, the top performing curriculum identified above was utilised in the CHOP study in which medical trainees and providers were first educated on nutrition in the first medical school-based teaching kitchen, Tulane University School of Medicine’s Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine (GCCM) and then they provided free cooking and nutrition classes for predominantly lower income patients. The meta-analysis was updated annually using the above methodology to inform whether modifications were required to the GCCM curriculum for the cohort study. Multilevel mixed effect multivariable regression was conducted on the 5847 subjects meeting CHOP study criteria from fall 2012–2018 (including consecutive medical trainees, medical providers and patients from the thirty-two participating health centres or universities nationally who voluntarily identified themselves to the above institutions and subsequently completed at least one pre-GCCM course validated survey(Reference Monlezun, Leong and Joo47)). Model performance was confirmed by standard regression diagnostics in addition to comparison to ML-based backward propagation neural networks using accuracy and root mean squared error. The primary outcome was high/medium v. low Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) adherence. High/medium adherence was set at 4–9 as adapted from the nine-point scale described in the seminal New England Journal of Medicine study by Trichipoulou et al. (Reference Trichopoulou, Costacou and Bamia24) and later utilised in the multi-centre randomised trial in the same journal by Estruch et al. (Reference Estruch, Ros and Salas-Salvadó3)

Results

Part A: systematic review and meta-analysis

The search scheme was utilised to identify 212 citations of which eleven met study criteria (n 1698 trainees, Fig. 1)(Reference Afaghi, Haj Agha Mohamadi and Ziaee15Reference Ray, Udumyan and Rajput-Ray23,Reference Monlezun, Leong and Joo47,Reference Sjarif, Yuliarti and Wahyuni48) . Random forest multiple imputation generated imputed values for missing data (NRMSE 0·103). Significant heterogeneity was noted among the included studies (Q-test P < 0·001; I 2 99·0 %). Therefore, random effects meta-analysis was selected over fixed effects, and subsequently calculated an overall ES across two high, three moderate and six low-quality studies of 9·80 (95 % CI (7·15, 12·45), 95 % CI (6·87, 13·85); P < 0·001) (Fig. 2). The two high-quality studies as characterised by the STROBE criteria had a significantly higher ES than the moderate and low-quality studies (Q-test P < 0·001; I 2 99·0 %). Nutrition education interventions among the high, moderate and low-quality studies improved medical student competencies counseling patients on nutrition (improvement %, pooled s d %) by 41 % (4 %), 18 % (13 %) and 21 (14 %). The largest ES was demonstrated by Monlezun et al. (31·67, 95 % CI (29·91, 33·43)) which was significantly greater than the other high-quality study ES (5·14, 95 % CI (4·71, 5·57)), with improved competencies (pooled s d) of 72 % (2 %) v. 9 % (5 %), respectively. The number needed to treat for the top performing study was 12.

Fig. 1 Flow chart for study data extraction

Fig. 2 Machine learning-augmented meta-analysis of competency improvement with nutrition education by STROBE study quality

The asymmetrical funnel plot (Fig. 3) and the Harbord–Egger (P = 0·128) and Begg–Mazumdar (P = 0·020) statistical tests were not conclusive for non-significant small study effects or publication bias. To address this, trim and fill with random effects meta-analysis was applied to generate an adjusted overall ES of 6·66 (95 % CI (3·38, 9·94); P < 0·001) (Fig. 4) with a modified funnel plot that included two simulated studies that were quantitatively predicted to be omitted from the literature secondary to publication bias (Fig. 5).

Fig. 3 Publication bias with funnel plot (pseudo 95 % CI)

Fig. 4 Bias adjustment with trim and fill

Fig. 5 Bias control with trim and fill funnel plot (pseudo 95 % CI)

The unadjusted and adjusted random effects meta-analysis results were then compared with the ML meta-analysis results. ML-linear regression (ML-LR) with 10-fold cross validation was the initial algorithm tested due to the outcome being continuous. It generated an overall ES of 9·81 (95 % CI (9·42, 10·20)), but the root relative squared error was optimised from 97·99 % to 81·31 % by instead using ML-LR with locally weighted learning (LWL), which integrated ML-LR with a specified weighted instances handler(Reference Frank, Hall, Pfahringer, Kjærulff and Meek49,Reference Atkeson, Moore, Schaal and Aha50) . This algorithm was superior to the other 24, including reduced error pruning tree with backfitting, random tree, random forest, decision stump, zero-R, M5 model tree, decision table, input mapped classifier, weighted instances handler wrapper, vote, stacking, regression by discretisation, random sub-space, randomisable filtered classifier, random committee, multi-scheme, cross-validation parameter selection, bagging, attribute selected classifier, additive regression, K-nearest neighbours, support vector machine with regression, multi-layer perceptron with backward propagation and Gaussian regression.

Part B: cohort study

The hands-on cooking and nutrition education curriculum (GCCM) from the top performing study was thus applied to CHOP. Fully adjusting for age, sex, race, special diet, institution and time invariant unobserved traits, GCCM compared with standard medical care and education significantly increased the odds of superior diets (high/medium v. low MedDiet adherence) for residents/fellows most (OR 10·79, 95 % CI (4·94, 23·58); P < 0·001) followed by healthcare students (OR 9·62, 95 % CI (5·92, 15·63); P < 0·001), providers (OR 5·19, 95 % CI (3·23, 8·32), P < 0·001) and patients (OR 2·48, 95 % CI (1·38, 4·45); P = 0·002) compared with patients without GCCM treatment, with results consistent with those from ML (Fig. 6).

Fig. 6 Machine learning-augmented multi-level mixed effects cohort analysis of hands-on cooking and nutrition education (GCCM) improving Mediterranean diet adherence*

Discussion

The current study is the first known meta-analysis suggesting nutrition education improves medical trainee competencies providing patients dietary counseling for overall reduction and co-management of obesity and CVD (part A). It achieved this by applying a novel ML approach to traditional biostatistical random effects meta-analysis technique to produce more precise and efficient estimates of studies assessed using the standard STROBE criteria, with estimates adjusted using the well accepted trim and fill method. Additionally, the current study is the first to unite the following novel elements of a multi-centre prospective cohort study design assessing a hands-on cooking and nutrition education curriculum (informed by the above evidence-base) with ML augmentation of a longitudinal statistical analysis of medical trainees and providers, and thus demonstrating that such a curriculum improves their diets and therefore the diets of the patients they then taught (part B). Translating the clinical efficacy, cost-effectiveness and societal equity-enhancing aspects of public health nutrition into medicine globally may therefore may facilitated with this unique intervention that was united with the methodological advances of rigorous causal inference statistics integrated with ML (increasingly demonstrated to produce statistical results familiar to clinical audiences but with the added advantages of the greater versatility and efficiency of ML)(Reference Balanescu, Monlezun and Donisan51,Reference Dvorin, Lamb and Monlezun52) .

The clinical significance of these findings is they provide the first empirical codification supporting the eventual development of the evidence-based foundation of scalable nutrition education for obesity and nutrition-related chronic diseases including CVD, suggesting a blueprint for the next generation of medical professionals to ultimately reduce the explosive growth of these global healthcare challenges. Nutrition already has an accepted role reducing the health inequities and economic burden of obesity, CVD and other nutritionally related chronic disease epidemics(Reference Huedo-Medina, Garcia and Bihuniak2Reference Kahn, Robertson and Smith4,Reference Pool, Ning and Lloyd-Jones53,Reference Sofi, Cesari and Abbate54) . By educating medical trainees about culinary medicine through hands-on cooking and nutrition education in teaching kitchens, an increasing number of randomised trials and causal inference analyses of large cohort studies are showing not only that trainees have superior mastery of core counseling topics but also that patients taught by such trainees in those kitchens subsequently have superior diets and health outcomes(Reference Monlezun, Leong and Joo47,Reference Dvorin, Lamb and Monlezun52Reference Razavi, Monlezun and Sapin58) . This programmatic advancement may better equip medical professionals to complement their pharmacological and surgical response to the obesity and nutrition-related chronic disease epidemics with their improved mastery of the social determinants of health. But the current analysis suggests that this advancement may be further accelerated through the systematic application of emerging ML techniques to allow more accurate, rapid, efficient and automated analyses of high-dimensional and heterogenous data in real-time, to guide quality improvement in medical trainee and patient education.

One such potentially valuable ML application in this field is the locally weighted regression that is memory based:

$${w_{ii}} = \exp [ - {1 \over 2}{({x_i} - {x_q})^T}\,D({x_i} - {x_q})]$$
$$X = {(\widetilde {{x_1}},\widetilde {{x_2}}, \ldots ,\widetilde {{x_p}})^T}$$
$$\widetilde {{x_1}} = {[{({x_i} - {x_q})^T}1]^T}$$
$$y = {({y_1},{y_2}, \ldots ,{y_q})^T}$$
$$\it\beta = {({X^T}WX)^{ - 1}}{X^T}Wy$$
$$\widehat {{y_q}} = {\it\beta _{n + 1}}$$

with ${\it\beta _{n + 1}}$ indicating regression vector $\it\beta $ to the ${\left( {n + 1} \right)^{th}}$ element, X is representing the matrix with vector y, W is the diagonal weight matrix and query point ${x_p}$ that has p training points $({x_i}{y_i})$ (Reference Schaal, Atkeson and Vijayakumar59). The traditional statistical technique of the DerSimonian & Laird non-iterative random effects meta-analysis has several notable mathematical differences from the above approach. The DerSimonian & Laird technique historically is a popular random effects approach that has the advantage of comparable performance with less computational intensity v. competing methods dealing with study heterogeneity(Reference Kontopantelis and Reeves60Reference DerSimonian and Kacker63). This method is described with $s_i^2$ for the variance of K studies to produce an ES of ${Y_i}$ :

$$E({Y_i}) = \mu $$
$${\rm{var}}\left( {{Y_i}} \right) = \;{\sigma ^2} + \;s_i^2$$
$${w_i} = ({\sigma ^2} + s_i^2)^{ - 1}$$
$${ \widehat {w_l}} = ({ {\widehat {\sigma}} \,^2} + s_i^2)^{ - 1}$$
$$\widehat \mu = \sum {\widehat {{W_f}}{Y_f}} /\sum {\widehat {{W_f}}}$$
$${\mathop{\rm var}} (\widehat \mu ) = {\bigg(\sum {\widehat {{W_f}}} \bigg)^{ - 1}}$$

Despite the above strengths of this meta-analysis in both its theoretical, analytic and programmatic advances, it has multiple weaknesses. These include the wide variety of studies (even among the high-quality studies per STROBE criteria) ranging from the sample traits, type of nutrition education, the assessment tool, the outcomes, study duration, analytic approach and even the reporting. The current analysis further suffers from a lower number of studies and particularly high-quality studies standardised using the best practices in the above intervention and study traits. The random effects meta-analysis technique, STROBE criteria, trim and fill method and ML augmentation are meant to reduce the impact of weaknesses of the current analysis but cannot nullify its effects on study validity, and so these results should be interpreted with them in mind. The limitations of the above cohort study as the second phase of the current study include its non-randomised design assessing a voluntary curriculum.

Our results indicate that such varied education models may benefit from a more robust approach that draws from the hallmarks of evidence-based education and rigorous methodologies. One such promising approach is that utilised by the only study in the analysis to attain the STROBE classification of a high-quality study and have a significant ES that of GCCM(Reference Frank, Hall, Pfahringer, Kjærulff and Meek49). The current study utilised control comparison, validated survey metrics, multi-year longitudinal follow-up, deliberate practice counseling patients, adequately powered sample size, statistical methodologies such as fixed effects regression to allow causal inference controlling for confounders and the MedDiet. The study is part of the overall CHOP cohort as the world’s first study of hands-on cooking and nutrition education for medical trainees, providers and patients, run through Tulane University School of Medicine’s GCCM. Since its launch up to May 2017, GCCM has provided 24 680+ hours of hands-on cooking and nutrition education to 4051+ medical students, physicians and patients across forty-five medical schools, hospitals and colleges.

Such interventions may be increasingly useful as health systems internationally are progressively outmatched by the rising clinical, cost and inequity toll of obesity and its nutrition-related chronic disease epidemics. Culinary medicine as preventive obesity management may be a promising scalable intervention long term through better trained medical professionals. But the benefit may also be short term through better educated patients served in hands-on cooking and nutrition education classes, led by the same trainees who first were educated themselves in those classes. The insistence on high-quality studies using rigorous, novel integration of traditional statistics and artificial intelligence-driven ML may help accelerate the evidence base for such healthcare innovations as culinary medicine uniting medicine and public health through population health management. The current study attempts to fill such theoretical, methodological and programmatic gaps in the associated research fields, for the equitable and cost effective good of patients globally particularly with obesity and its related complications.

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements: The authors wish to express their gratitude for Susan Peters and Blythe Peters for their public health and nutritional expertise in the review of this manuscript. Financial support: There are no sources of funding for this study. Conflict of interest: There are no conflicts of interest. Authorship: Content contributions include conceptualisation (D.J.M., C.C., T.N.), methodology (D.J.M., T.N., F.N.), validation (D.J.M., T.N.), formal analysis (D.J.M.), investigation (D.J.M., C.C., T.N., F.N., D.A., R.S., N.D., A.S., L.S., A.D., T.H.), data curation (D.J.M., C.C.), writing – original draft (D.J.M., C.C.), writing – review and editing (D.J.M., C.C., T.N., F.N., D.A., R.S., N.D., A.S., L.S., A.D., T.H.), visualisation (D.J.M.) and supervision (T.N.). Ethics of human subject participation: The current study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki, and all procedures involving research study participants were approved by the Tulane University Biomedical Institutional Review Board. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects/patients in the analysis referenced in the conclusion.

References

Abubakar, II, Tillmann, T & Banerjee, A (2015) Global, regional, and national age-sex specific all-cause and cause-specific mortality for 240 causes of death, 1990–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global burden of disease study 2013. Lancet 385, 117171.Google Scholar
Huedo-Medina, TB, Garcia, M, Bihuniak, JD et al. (2016) Methodologic quality of meta-analyses and systematic reviews on the Mediterranean diet and cardiovascular disease outcomes: a review. Am J Clin Nutr 103, 841850.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Estruch, R, Ros, E, Salas-Salvadó, J et al. (2013) Primary prevention of cardiovascular disease with a Mediterranean diet. N Engl J Med 368, 12791290.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kahn, R, Robertson, RM, Smith, R et al. (2008) The impact of prevention on reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease. Circulation 118, 576585.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
LaVeist, TA, Gaskin, D & Richard, P (2011) Estimating the economic burden of racial health inequalities in the United States. Int J Health Serv 41, 231238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ng, M, Fleming, T, Robinson, M et al. (2014) Global, regional, and national prevalence of overweight and obesity in children and adults during 1980–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global burden of disease study 2013. Lancet 384, 766781.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murray, CJL, Atkinson, C, Bhalla, K et al. (2013) The state of US health, 1990–2010: burden of diseases, injuries, and risk factors. JAMA 310, 591608.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smith, AW, Borowski, LA, Liu, B et al. (2011) U.S. primary care physicians’ diet-, physical activity-, and weight-related care of adult patients. Am J Prev Med 41, 3342.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lenders, CM, Deen, DD, Bistrian, B et al. (2014) Residency and specialties training in nutrition: a call for action. Am J Clin Nutr 99, 1174S1183S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jay, M, Gillespie, C, Ark, T et al. (2008) Do internists, pediatricians, and psychiatrists feel competent in obesity care? Using a needs assessment to drive curriculum design. J Gen Intern Med 23, 10661070.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Adams, KM, Lindell, KC, Kohlmeier, M et al. (2006) Status of nutrition education in medical schools. Am J Clin Nutr 83, 941S944S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spencer, EH, Frank, E, Elon, LK et al. (2006) Predictors of nutrition counseling behaviors and attitudes in US medical students. Am J Clin Nutr 84, 655662.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
DiMaria-Ghalili, RA, Mirtallo, JM, Tobin, BW et al. (2014) Challenges and opportunities for nutrition education and training in the health care professions: intraprofessional and interprofessional call to action. Am J Clin Nutr 99, 1184S1193S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Devries, S, Dalen, JE, Eisenberg, DM et al. (2014) A deficiency of nutrition education in medical training. Am J Med 127, 804806.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Afaghi, A, Haj Agha Mohamadi, AA, Ziaee, A et al. (2012) Effect of an integrated case-based nutrition curriculum on medical education at Qazvin University of medical sciences, Iran. Glob J Health Sci 4, 112117.Google Scholar
Barss, P, Grivna, M, Al-Maskari, F et al. (2008) Strengthening public health medicine training for medical students: development and evaluation of a lifestyle curriculum. Med Teach 30, e196e218.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conroy, MB, Delichatsios, HK, Hafler, JP et al. (2004) Impact of a preventive medicine and nutrition curriculum for medical students. Am J Prev Med 27, 7780.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kohlmeier, M, McConathy, WJ, Cooksey Lindell, K et al. (2003) Adapting the contents of computer-based instruction based on knowledge tests maintains effectiveness of nutrition education. Am J Clin Nutr 77, 1025S1027S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lebensohn, P, Kligler, B, Dodds, S et al. (2012) Integrative medicine in residency education: developing competency through online curriculum training. J Grad Med Educ 4, 7682.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lewis, KO, Frank, GR, Nagel, R et al. (2014) Pediatric trainees’ engagement in the online nutrition curriculum: preliminary results. BMC Med Educ 14, 190.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schlair, S, Hanley, K, Gillespie, C et al. (2012) How medical students’ behaviors and attitudes affect the impact of a brief curriculum on nutrition counseling. J Nutr Educ Behav 44, 653657.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Crowley, J, Ball, L, Leveritt, MD et al. (2014) Impact of an undergraduate course on medical students’ self-perceived nutrition intake and self-efficacy to improve their health behaviours and counselling practices. J Prim Health Care 6, 101107.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ray, S, Udumyan, R, Rajput-Ray, M et al. (2012) Evaluation of a novel nutrition education intervention for medical students from across England. BMJ Open 2, e000417.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Trichopoulou, A, Costacou, T, Bamia, C et al. (2003) Adherence to a Mediterranean diet and survival in a Greek population. N Engl J Med 348, 25992608.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knowler, WC, Barrett-Connor, E, Fowler, SE et al. (2002) Reduction in the incidence of type 2 diabetes with lifestyle intervention or metformin. N Engl J Med 346, 393403.Google ScholarPubMed
Gardener, H, Wright, CB, Gu, Y et al. (2011) Mediterranean-style diet and risk of ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, and vascular death: the Northern Manhattan study. Am J Clin Nutr 94, 14581464.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Foroughi, M, Akhavanzanjani, M, Maghsoudi, Z et al. (2013) Stroke and nutrition: a review of studies. Int J Prev Med 4, S165S179.Google ScholarPubMed
McGaghie, WC, Issenberg, SB, Cohen, ER et al. (2011) Does simulation-based medical education with deliberate practice yield better results than traditional clinical education? A meta-analytic comparative review of the evidence. Acad Med 86, 706711.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iglehart, JK (2009) Prioritizing comparative-effectiveness research IOM recommendations. N Engl J Med 361, 325328.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moher, D, Liberati, A, Tetzlaff, J et al. (2009) PRISMA Group. Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement. PLoS Med 6, e1000097.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gallo, V, Egger, M, McCormack, V et al. (2011) Strengthening the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology--molecular epidemiology (STROBE-ME): an extension of the STROBE Statement. PLoS Med 8, e1001117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Borenstein, M, Hedges, LV, Higgins, JPT et al. (2011) Introduction to Meta-Analysis. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Shah, AD, Bartlett, JW, Carpenter, J et al. (2014) Comparison of random forest and parametric imputation models for imputing missing data using MICE: a CALIBER study. Am J Epidemiol 179, 764774.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Higgins, JPT, Thompson, SG, Deeks, JJ et al. (2003) Measuring inconsistency in meta-analyses. BMJ 327, 557–60.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dekks, JJ, Higgins, JPT & Altman, DG (editors) (2011) Chapter 9: Analyzing data and undertaking meta-analyses [Internet]. Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions; available at http://handbook.cochrane.org/chapter_9/9_5_2_identifying_and_measuring_heterogeneity.htm (accessed November 2020).Google Scholar
Harbord, RM, Egger, M & Sterne, JAC (2006) A modified test for small-study effects in meta-analyses of controlled trials with binary endpoints. Stat Med 25, 34433457.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Begg, CB & Mazumdar, M (1994) Operating characteristics of a rank correlation test for publication bias. Biometrics 50, 10881101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sterne, JAC, Egger, M & Smith, GD (2001) Investigating and dealing with publication and other biases in meta-analysis. BMJ 323, 101105.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Egger, M, Davey Smith, G, Schneider, M et al. (1997) Bias in meta-analysis detected by a simple, graphical test. BMJ 315, 629634.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Duval, S & Tweedie, R (2000) A nonparametric “trim and fill” method of accounting for publication bias in meta-analysis. J Am Stat Assoc 95, 8998.Google Scholar
Duval, S & Tweedie, R (2000) Trim and fill: a simple funnel-plot-based method of testing and adjusting for publication bias in meta-analysis. Biometrics 56, 455463.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carpenter, J, Rücker, G & Schwarzer, G (2011) Assessing the sensitivity of meta-analysis to selection bias: a multiple imputation approach. Biometrics 67, 10661072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peters, JL, Sutton, AJ, Jones, DR et al. (2007) Performance of the trim and fill method in the presence of publication bias and between-study heterogeneity. Stat Med 26, 45444562.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Terrin, N, Schmid, CH, Lau, J et al. (2003) Adjusting for publication bias in the presence of heterogeneity. Stat Med 22, 21132126.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jin, Z-C, Zhou, X-H & He, J (2015) Statistical methods for dealing with publication bias in meta-analysis. Stat Med 34, 343360.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
StataCorp. (2015) Stata Statistical Software [Internet]. College Station, TX, USA; available at http://www.stata.com (accessed November 2020).Google Scholar
Monlezun, DJ, Leong, B, Joo, E et al. (2015) Novel longitudinal and propensity score matched analysis of hands-on cooking and nutrition education v. traditional clinical education among 627 medical students. Adv Prev Med 2015, 656780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sjarif, DR, Yuliarti, K, Wahyuni, LK et al. (2016) Effectiveness of a comprehensive integrated module using interactive lectures and workshops in understanding and knowledge retention about infant feeding practice in fifth year medical students: a quasi-experimental study. BMC Med Educ 16, 210.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Frank, E, Hall, M & Pfahringer, B (2003) Locally weighted naive bayes. In Proceedings of the Nineteenth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, pp. 249256 [Kjærulff, U & Meek, C, editors]. San Francisco, CA, USA: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc.Google Scholar
Atkeson, CG, Moore, AW & Schaal, S (1997) Locally weighted learning. In Lazy Learning, pp. 1173 [Aha, DW, editor]. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer Netherlands.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balanescu, DV, Monlezun, DJ, Donisan, T et al. (2019) A cancer paradox: machine learning-backed propensity score analysis of coronary angiography findings in cardio-oncology. J Invasive Cardiol 31, 2126.Google Scholar
Dvorin, E, Lamb, MC, Monlezun, DJ et al. (2018) High frequency of systemic corticosteroid use for acute respiratory tract illnesses in ambulatory settings. JAMA Intern Med 178, 852854.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pool, LR, Ning, H, Lloyd-Jones, DM et al. (2017) Trends in racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovascular health among US adults from 1999–2012. J Am Heart Assoc 6, e006027.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sofi, F, Cesari, F, Abbate, R et al. (2008) Adherence to Mediterranean diet and health status: meta-analysis. BMJ 337, a1344.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Monlezun, DJ, Dart, L, Vanbeber, A et al. (2018) Machine learning-augmented propensity score-adjusted multilevel mixed effects panel analysis of hands-on cooking and nutrition education v. traditional curriculum for medical students as preventive cardiology: multisite cohort study of 3,248 trainees over 5 years. Biomed Res Int 2018, 5051289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Monlezun, DJ, Kasprowicz, E, Tosh, KW et al. (2015) Medical school-based teaching kitchen improves HbA1c, blood pressure, and cholesterol for patients with type 2 diabetes: results from a novel randomized controlled trial. Diabetes Res Clin Pract 109, 420426.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birkhead, AG, Foote, S, Monlezun, DJ et al. (2014) Medical student–led community cooking classes. Am J Prev Med 46, e41e42.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Razavi, AC, Monlezun, DJ, Sapin, A et al. (2020) Effect of culinary education curriculum on Mediterranean diet adherence and food cost savings in families: a randomized controlled trial. Public Health Nutr 3, 17.Google Scholar
Schaal, S, Atkeson, CG & Vijayakumar, S (2002) Scalable techniques from nonparametric statistics for real time robot learning. Appl Intell 17, 4960.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kontopantelis, E & Reeves, D (2012) Performance of statistical methods for meta-analysis when true study effects are non-normally distributed: a simulation study. Stat Methods Med Res 21, 409426.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kontopantelis, E & Reeves, D (2012) Performance of statistical methods for meta-analysis when true study effects are non-normally distributed: a comparison between DerSimonian-Laird and restricted maximum likelihood. Stat Methods Med Res 21, 657659.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jackson, D, Bowden, J & Baker, R (2010) How does the DerSimonian and Laird procedure for random effects meta-analysis compare with its more efficient but harder to compute counterparts? J Stat Plan Inference 140, 961970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DerSimonian, R & Kacker, R (2007) Random-effects model for meta-analysis of clinical trials: an update. Contemp Clin Trials 28, 105114.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Flow chart for study data extraction

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Machine learning-augmented meta-analysis of competency improvement with nutrition education by STROBE study quality

Figure 2

Fig. 3 Publication bias with funnel plot (pseudo 95 % CI)

Figure 3

Fig. 4 Bias adjustment with trim and fill

Figure 4

Fig. 5 Bias control with trim and fill funnel plot (pseudo 95 % CI)

Figure 5

Fig. 6 Machine learning-augmented multi-level mixed effects cohort analysis of hands-on cooking and nutrition education (GCCM) improving Mediterranean diet adherence*