Larner Student’s Pilot Course Gets Future Doctors Cooking.
By Janet Essman Franz
Ginger, garlic, and curry aromas waft through the first-floor hallway in the medical education center, where sounds of light conversation blend with scraping, clinking, and chopping. Inside the Larner Classroom, medical students peel carrots, dice onions, and de-stem kale. This is not a potluck social, it’s an academic class.
Twenty-eight first-year medical students are learning about culinary medicine, which pairs nutritional science with preventive health care. This evening’s session is one of five in a semester-long extracurricular program, developed by medical
class of 2026 students Sarah Krumholz and Molly Hurd, that teaches about lifestyle interventions for chronic disease. Tonight, as the students learn about the role of vegetables and fruits in preventing disease, they prepare and eat their dinner.
On the menu: golden lentil soup, sweet potato stuffed with black beans, and cancer prevention.
Co-leaders of the Lifestyle Medicine Student Interest Group at UVM, Hurd and Krumholz recognized the value of including nutrition in medical
education. Working with faculty advisor Whitney Calkins, M.D., assistant professor of family medicine, they developed the pilot class with an aim to educate future doctors on the science of culinary medicine and increase their confidence when
engaging with patients about nutrition, because nutrition counseling can save lives.
“Diet can be positively linked to disease outcomes. If you intervene early enough, you can make a difference in people’s health,”
said Krumholz. “Being able to work with first-year medical students to lay foundational knowledge in nutrition and basic skills in counseling early in their training allows them to maintain that perspective as they continue their training
and future patient care.”
A registered dietitian, Krumholz was inspired to attend medical school by her experience counseling patients with diabetes and liver and cardiovascular diseases. At Boston Medical Center she talked to
patients at bedside, often after acute coronary events or limb amputations resulting from uncontrolled diabetes. She also taught therapeutic cooking classes for people with chronic illness and served as a nutrition expert on a pediatric intervention
study.
Hurd learned about culinary medicine while pursuing a certificate in integrative health at UVM, concurrent with a B.S. in neuroscience, graduating in 2019. She earned an M.S. in pharmacology at UVM in 2020. As part of her undergraduate
coursework, Hurd studied abroad in Denmark and Iceland, where she witnessed the benefits of health care focused on illness prevention through nutrition, exercise, and other lifestyle behaviors.
“Many primary care physicians [in
the U.S.] don’t have skills to talk to their patients about nutrition or how to have an impact on patients’ diets,” Hurd said. “My goal for this class is to help students feel more comfortable talking about food and diet
with patients.”