"...all doctors should be able to diagnose and treat nutritional deficiencies."
Royal College of Physicians.
Nutrition and Patients: A Doctor's Responsibility. London 2002
This page has been printed from the www.stewartnutrition.co.uk web site.
Type 2 Diabetes
To be written
Nutrition Assessment
Are you at risk of being nutritionally deficient?
NICE guidelines
Simple dietary assessment
Risk factors for nutritional deficiency
Prevalence of Nutritional Deficiencies
Britain – NDNS, National Diet and Nutrition Surveys
Other British Nutritional Surveys
Worldwide – World Health Organisation
Risk Factors for Nutritional Deficiency
The Four Uses of the Essential Nutrients
How Deficiencies Develop
Deficiency Symptoms and Signs
Nutritional Tests
Treating Nutritional Deficiencies
Food Fortification
Supplementation
Education
Disease Control
Healthy Eating
Dietary Sources of Essential Nutrients
Energy and Protein
Vitamins
Minerals
Essential Fatty Acids
Guide to Nutritional Supplements
Nutritional Emergencies
Unintentional Weight Loss
Persistent Vomiting
Vomiting in Pregnancy
Prolonged Diarrhoea
Alcohol Excess
Acute Thiamine Deficiency
Vitamin B12 Deficiency
Severe Anaemia
Safety of Nutritional Supplements
Reports on the Adverse Effects of Supplements
Safe Upper Levels for Vitamins and Minerals (UK) - EVM
Review of Dietary Advice on Vitamin A (UK) - SACN
Cochrane Review of Antioxidant Supplements (International)
Are Your Supplements Safe for You?
Major Contraindications in more detail
The Response of Industry to Safety Issues
How to Report an Adverse Reaction
Site information
About this site
About Dr Stewart
Contact Dr. Stewart
Errors, Corrections and Acknowledgements
Medical disclaimer
References and Further Reading
Web references
Full reference list