LLEK10249U Evidence, Diet and Health

Volume 2020/2021
Education

MSc Programme in Clinical Nutrition
MSc Programme in Human Nutrition

Content

The focus of the course is how to assess available evidence for a causal relationship between diet and diseases with a main focus on diet, macronutrients and life-style diseases such as cancer, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. The course will provide the students with theoretical teaching in the methodology, several examples and exercises and assignments that gives them opportunity to practise.

Learning Outcome

The main objective of the course is to provide the students with an understanding of basic methods and concepts in nutritional epidemiology, to enable them to assess available evidence for a causal relationship between diet and diseases.

After completion of the course the students should be able to:

Knowledge:
- Define epidemiology and causality
- Describe the epidemiological measures of frequency and association
- Explain the concepts bias, confounding, effect modification, chance, power, validity and generalisability
- List the study designs, and describe their advantages and limitations in relation to nutritional epidemiology
- Describe the structure of a data set, and types of variables

Skills:
- Demonstrate ability to critically assess the validity of studies on the relation between diet and disease
- Demonstrate ability to handle a data set with nutritional variables, and to assess for confounding and effect modification
- Discuss the evidence for causal relationship between diet and disease

Competences:
- Independently perform evidence evaluations of relationships between dietary components and health
- Identify gabs in our current knowledge and to contribute to the planning of studies that will make progress
- Make dietary recommendations based on an evaluation of the evidence

Course literature will be announced at study start on the course’s Absalon page.

Academic qualifications equivalent to a BSc degree are recommended.
Knowledge and skills in nutrition, physiology, biochemistry, and statistics are recommended.
Theoretical lectures and exercise practice. The objective of course assignments is to use of the principles in evaluation of scientific evidence.
  • Category
  • Hours
  • Lectures
  • 16
  • Preparation
  • 70
  • Exercises
  • 52
  • Exam Preparation
  • 20
  • Exam
  • 48
  • Total
  • 206
Continuous feedback during the course of the semester

We provide a thorough feed-back on all the written assignments mostly in plenum, but also for at least one of the assignments some individual feedback in writing on language as well as content.

Credit
7,5 ECTS
Type of assessment
Written assignment, 48 hours
Description of examination: The student will be given two papers and a number of questions that they have to consider in their answer. They will have 48 hours to do the task in which they are allowed to use all papers from the course, their notes, the internet and also to meet and discuss, but each student must make an individual answer and they are not allowed to discuss their written answers or copy writing from other students. The evaluation will consider skills mainly from the strength of the arguments and an overall evaluation of the answer. The final answer must be uploaded within 48 hours.
Exam registration requirements

Approval of written assignments during the course.

Aid
All aids allowed
Marking scale
7-point grading scale
Censorship form
No external censorship
Internal grading. More assessors.
Re-exam

If 10 or fewer register for the reexamination the examination form will be oral. The student will be given two papers 48 hours prior to do the oral examination for preparation. The oral exam will be 20 min.


The requirements for registration can be fulfilled before re-exam. All assignments must be handed in no later than 3 weeks before reexamination. Assignments must be approved.

Criteria for exam assesment

Please see "Learning Outcome"