Priorities for implementing nutritional science into practice to optimize military performance

Nutr Rev. 2017 Jun 1;75(suppl_2):89-97. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nux019.

Abstract

The Metabolically Optimized Brain study explores nutritional science believed to be ready to place into practice to help improve US service member mission-readiness and performance. To this end, an implementation expert panel considered how the US Department of Defense Subsistence Food Service Program, which is operated by each branch of the military in dining facilities within the continental United States, could apply the best nutritional science in a cost-effective manner. The work of this panel was facilitated through a series of thematic conversations guided by evidence generated through systematic reviews, which were performed to identify systems and process gaps and propose possible solutions. The expert panel used a Delphi method of multiple voting, and ultimately proposed 11 systems changes, of which 6 were ranked as highest priority. The proposed highest priority changes were then discussed by the participants with additional stakeholders. The process described here highlights how experts from different sectors operating in a complex system of subsystems can come together to cross talk, identify gaps, and propose mutually beneficial system and process changes to improve the alignment of nutritional science and institutional food-service practice.

Keywords: healthy; human performance optimization; implementation expert panel; military; mission-readiness; nutritional science; policy; practice; resilience; systematic review.

MeSH terms

  • Cognition / physiology
  • Diet*
  • Food Services
  • Health Plan Implementation
  • Humans
  • Military Medicine
  • Military Personnel*
  • Nutritional Sciences*
  • United States
  • United States Department of Defense