Food for Life, Fit for Life – Prevent Diabetes, Heart Disease and Cancer is a set of training modules in lifestyle preventive health. It took me 12 months to write and it’s now available for licensing. You can download a free ebook version that describes the content. Here’s what’s included:
- Training and evaluation manual for course presenters
- 120 PowerPoint slides with notes and contemporary references
- Sample learner assessment questions for each module
- Fact sheets that can be used as handouts to clients/students
- Risk evaluation self-assessment handouts for nutrition, physical activity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer
- Case studies for workgroups and workshops
- Glossary of terms
- Regular newsletter
- US and UK/Australia versions (spelling and units)
- Evidence based information, fully referenced
- Flexible licence conditions and regular, free updates for one year
- Access to a membership web site for support, updates and extra resources.
Background
I started writing this over 12 months ago as a tool to use for talks to clients and groups in fitness and personal training. Rather than the limited training course I had in mind at that time, it has now morphed into something more like a training ‘environment’ with support tools like handout risk assessments and case study tasks. I have plans to add more of these tools and content within the context of the course. For example, a basic ‘sports nutrition’ module is near completion.
As a trainer-presenter, your options are varied. You could select various slides or modules for presentations ranging from 2 hours to 2 days to groups or even individual clients. The target audience could include lay people or professionals in various support roles in preventive health. Presenters could include dietitians, nutritionists, fitness trainers, practice nurses, physios, diabetes educators and any support professionals working in preventive and lifestyle health. Some skill in delivering an appropriate language and idiom to audiences with variable knowledge bases would be required by the presenter.
I’ve summarised the essential elements of lifestyle disease, meaning the risks with which we burden ourselves because of our behaviour in relation to food, nutrition and physical activity. Although I mention the roles of environment and genetics, this is not the focus of the program at this time, but I do have plans to add modules that address basic issues in environmental safety in relation to food quality. Any additional modules added are included in the updates available in the licence for one year.
The core elements are:
- Type 2 Diabetes
- Cardiovascular disease
- Cancer
- Obesity
- Motivational and behavioural change
- Nutrition
- Physical activity and exercise
For example, I’ve summarised the complete content of the WCRF/AICR Expert Report: Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity and the Prevention of Cancer: a Global Perspective so that the essential points are clear.
Licences
At present, only one licence option is available. This locks the headers and footers and PowerPoint attributions to me and no changes are permissible. I will probably also offer a ‘professional licence’ under which the licensee has the right to modify the content and replace attribution and headers etc with their identity. This would allow the licensee, with some restrictions, to modify the content and to adjust any particular aspect that did not suit their purpose or premise.
Availability
I’ve created a free ebook (pdf) version of the course, featuring the PowerPoint slide headings with content from the notes of each slide. This delivers a summary version and illustrates the content quite successfully. Not everything is fleshed out of course.
The best way to get this is to fill out the email form on the front page of the web site — or on this blog at the top right. This will redirect to a download page after confirmation. You will then get an email advising when content is updated or added, including new web and blog articles. This would be no more frequent than once each week.
I hope you take a look at the free ebook and let me know what you think. Suggestions, comments and admonitions are, of course, welcome.
No related posts.
