Close Menu
Healthtost
  • News
  • Mental Health
  • Men’s Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Skin Care
  • Sexual Health
  • Pregnancy
  • Nutrition
  • Fitness
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Why Knowledge Alone Won’t Transform Your Patients — And What Really Does

July 3, 2026

Blood test can predict which colon cancer patients benefit from chemotherapy

July 3, 2026

When You Can’t Trust Your Gut: What to Do About Diarrhea During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding

July 3, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Healthtost
SUBSCRIBE
  • News

    Blood test can predict which colon cancer patients benefit from chemotherapy

    July 3, 2026

    Can ibuprofen improve the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis?

    July 3, 2026

    Tailored drug combinations improve outcomes for treatment-resistant advanced melanoma

    July 2, 2026

    Plant-based diets offer heart benefits but may require supplementation

    July 2, 2026

    LEF1 and niche-derived factors regulate T cell stemness in chronic diseases

    July 1, 2026
  • Mental Health

    How much do friends affect the mental health of teenagers? What a new study can (and can’t) tell us

    July 3, 2026

    What happens in your blood when you are stressed? We put it to the test

    June 28, 2026

    Why negative news grabs our attention and what it means for our mental health

    June 25, 2026

    Everyone wants to think they’re open-minded – here’s why most people aren’t

    June 24, 2026

    five tips from influential thinkers to calm your nerves

    June 19, 2026
  • Men’s Health

    Genetics play a bigger role than pregnancy in childhood obesity risk

    July 1, 2026

    A link between e-cigarettes and oral cancer

    July 1, 2026

    James Michener, My Father and Me: Finding Our Place in the World and Embracing the Mysteries of Life

    June 30, 2026

    Welcome (Back) to MDA! Start here.

    June 29, 2026

    10 irrational thought patterns that increase anxiety

    June 28, 2026
  • Women’s Health

    Dopamine Diet: How to Eat for Better Mood, Motivation, and Focus

    July 3, 2026

    Why is my sinus breaking? Causes of Pelvic Floor Contractions – Vuvatech

    July 1, 2026

    Benefits of choline during pregnancy | The Wellness Blog

    June 30, 2026

    How Victoria eliminated her hip pain in just 10 weeks

    June 30, 2026

    Understanding the causes of thinning female hair

    June 29, 2026
  • Skin Care

    Why Jojoba Beads Beat Coconut Shell Pow

    July 3, 2026

    A Promising New Painless Home Treatment – SkinCare Physicians

    July 2, 2026

    The Best Skin Care Products for Men, According to a Celebrity Facialist

    July 1, 2026

    Sunscreen mistakes that could leave your sensitive skin unprotected

    June 30, 2026

    Body Smooth | The body scrub that started it all – Tropic Skincare

    June 29, 2026
  • Sexual Health

    Climate justice is reproductive justice

    July 2, 2026

    5 STDs that can cause bruising

    July 2, 2026

    Complete Guide to 2026 — Sexual Health Alliance

    June 30, 2026

    Five things you need to know about herpes

    June 28, 2026

    Fildena 120 Best Time To Take

    June 26, 2026
  • Pregnancy

    When You Can’t Trust Your Gut: What to Do About Diarrhea During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding

    July 3, 2026

    Yoga, Pregnancy, Motherhood and Connection

    July 2, 2026

    Yoga poses for expectant mothers

    June 28, 2026

    Not too much, not too little: Finding the gold of vitamins and minerals

    June 27, 2026

    Clean Beauty Myths A dermatologist wants every mom to stop believing

    June 26, 2026
  • Nutrition

    Why Knowledge Alone Won’t Transform Your Patients — And What Really Does

    July 3, 2026

    5 easy tips + a kid-approved menu

    July 1, 2026

    Healthy Raspberry Lemon Snack Loaf

    June 30, 2026

    Raspberry Ginger Lime Detox Water

    June 29, 2026

    6 Lunch Recipes in 10 Minutes – JSHealth

    June 28, 2026
  • Fitness

    Junior Nsemba’s 3 best drills for strength, speed and dominance on the rugby field

    July 3, 2026

    Meet the P90X Supplement System: Five Products. A powerful performance system.

    July 2, 2026

    6.26 Friday Faves – The Fitnessista

    June 30, 2026

    9 Useful Fitness Tips for an Unmotivated Person

    June 29, 2026

    Is your body stuck in a state of stress? Here’s what you need to know

    June 28, 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
Healthtost
Home»Nutrition»Why Knowledge Alone Won’t Transform Your Patients — And What Really Does
Nutrition

Why Knowledge Alone Won’t Transform Your Patients — And What Really Does

healthtostBy healthtostJuly 3, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Why Knowledge Alone Won't Transform Your Patients — And What
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Imagine this. A patient is sitting across from you. They understand everything you explained—insulin resistance, blood sugar dysregulation, and the role of food choices in their metabolic health. They nod throughout the consultation. As they leave, they turn around and say, “This time I’m really going to do it.”

Three months later, they returned. Nothing has changed.

If you’ve worked in healthcare or coaching for any length of time, this scene is uncomfortably familiar. It raises a question that most educational programs do not ask: If information alone changed behavior, wouldn’t every patient succeed? Shouldn’t every professional be properly equipped for clients to thrive? Will chronic disease not decrease but accelerate?

This is exactly where he chose to begin a recent discussion with two of the most experienced educators in the field of metabolic health. What resulted was an honest, enlightening exploration of the void at the heart of modern health care—and what it really takes to close it.

The Inconvenient Truth About Information-Based Care

“Science tells us what to do, but it doesn’t necessarily teach us how to help another human being actually do it.”

— Dr. Hassina Kajee

This is the central tension that the Nutrition Network has encountered as an organization. For years, the focus has—rightly—been on advancing the science of metabolic health: the mechanisms of insulin resistance, the biochemistry of obesity, and the evidence base for therapeutic carbohydrate restriction. This science is powerful and changes lives.

But somewhere between research and the real world, something gets lost.

The missing piece isn’t more data. It’s the human element— understanding that sustainable lifestyle modification requires much more than a well-constructed protocol and an educated patient.

The “Two Hats” of Metabolic Health Coaching

Eli Bromley, health coach, educator and lecturer at the new Nutrition Network’s Foundations of Metabolic Coaching coursehas been navigating this reality for six years. He describes the metabolic health coach as someone who wears what he calls “two hats”:

  • The teacher’s hat: Someone who can explain what’s going on in the body, why blood sugar spikes at three in the afternoon, why certain foods trigger cravings, and why metabolic dysfunction isn’t just a failure of will.
  • The coach’s hat: Someone who can look at the person in front of them and ask what is really going on in their life, their environment, and their belief systems.

“It’s that nuance of bringing the two together,” Bromley explains, “knowing when to wear each hat — that’s the beauty of the metabolic health coach.”

What interns are getting right (and what they’re missing)

The traditional medical system is not entirely responsible for this training gap. Doctors work under enormous time pressure and many are just beginning to learn about metabolic health themselves.

Those who do understand it—and Dr. Kajee is frank that she was once there herself—often fall into the trap of what she calls “the download”: an enthusiastic transfer of information that the patient receives but cannot realistically act on.

“I still suffer from it,” he admits. “Too much information, like a download.”

This is where coaches and practitioners often lose the thread. A person can understand, mentally, that they need to change their diet. They can know science. They can have a meal plan in front of them. And still, nothing changes. Not because they lack motivation or intelligence, but because the real obstacles—stress, nervous system dysfunction, environment, identity and habit— have not been addressed.

The question most interns never ask

To help someone change, Bromley argues, we need to start with a fundamental question: Who is the man in front of me right now, right now?

  • Is this person tuned in enough to receive information?
  • Are they in acute distress?
  • Are there too many goals on the table or is there a lack of clear direction?
  • Is their nervous system in a state where they really feel safe, heard and met?

This kind of attention cannot be automated, nor can it be captured in a generic meal plan. It requires presence, active listening, and body awareness—skills that typical clinical health care models rarely teach.

The Shifting Landscape: Clinical Demands and the Rise of AI

There is a wider change in clinical practice. More and more professionals are frustrated with a model that doesn’t give them time to address the behavioral drivers of chronic disease. They can diagnose pathology and interpret lab results, but they can’t examine why a patient is reaching for sugar at night or what belief systems are quietly undermining their progress.

Health guidance—especially metabolic training— steps into this void as an essential supplement to medicine.

Why AI won’t replace the human coach

With the rapid rise of artificial intelligence, technology can now create meal plans, interpret lab values ​​and explain nutritional biochemistry at scale.

However, AI cannot really be present with a human. He can’t read a room. He can’t notice that a customer is sitting with his arms folded and his voice tight, saying he’s “fine,” while his entire body language tells a different story.

The value of genuine human presence and empathic guidance is set to increase, not decrease, in the age of automation.

The practical skills that really create transformation

Beyond understanding therapeutic nutrition, a successful metabolic health coach must master the more nuanced area of ​​human psychology and behavior change:

Basic SkillWhy it matters for metabolic health
Regulation of the nervous systemA client with chronic stress is not in a normal state to absorb information or form new habits. Coaches need to know how to slow things down.
Environmental MappingBehavior does not occur in a vacuum. Understanding a client’s home, workplace dynamics, and social support structures shapes what is truly sustainable.
Deconstructing beliefsDeep-seated beliefs about self-worth and ability silently derail practical interventions. A trained coach helps clients rewrite these internal narratives.
Tiny target settingToo many goals creates paralysis. Finding the exact scope that challenges a client without overwhelming them is a vital coaching skill.

“No one teaches us how to listen,” says Dr. Kajee, “and all these tools for how to be good partners—in business partnerships or in relationships—those are skills we need in life, too.”

The Business Gap: Why Great Coaches Still Struggle

Knowing how to coach effectively does not in itself create a thriving professional practice. These are completely different skill sets.

Gwen Warren, nutritional therapist, business coach and head of Nutrition Network’s Business Builder Coaching Coursehas spent over a decade helping professionals build sustainable, profitable practices that align with their core mission.

Dr. Kajee frames the challenge candidly:

“When you train to be a doctor or a coach, you don’t want to train for business. You went to learn the skills of helping the person. But those two things don’t necessarily sit together.”

The assumption most coaches make is that their main hurdle is finding clients. The reality is usually more subtle, rooted in:

  • Ingrained beliefs about money and the psychology of charging for a call.
  • Structural gaps around positioning, pricing and value articulation.
  • Fears of visibility, judgment or impostor syndrome.

These standards are not personal failures. it is the inevitable result of training programs that beautifully teach the clinical craft but leave practitioners unprepared for entrepreneurship. Fortunately, business acumen is a learnable, systematic skill.

Practical takeaways: What you can apply to your practice today

You don’t have to wait to start closing the training gap. You can apply these fundamental principles immediately:

  1. Check in before you train: Before downloading information, assess your customer’s current status. Are they tuned in and receptive or overwhelmed? Meet them where they are.
  2. Slowing targets: More goals do not equal more change. equal to paralysis. Identify the single change with the highest leverage for the person and anchor it first.
  3. Hear the belief behind the behavior: When a client says they “just can’t keep up,” explore the moment of choice. What do they tell themselves? This internal monologue is where the real coaching work lies.
  4. Separate coaching skills from business development: Excellent clinical skills do not automatically produce a sustainable business model. Both require separate, dedicated strategies.

Two new courses created for now

To address these distinct challenges, Nutrition Network has developed two brand new career paths:

  • The Foundations of Metabolic Coaching: It addresses the first gap – bridging the gap between metabolic science and behavior transformation.
  • The Coaching Business Builder: It addresses the second gap – providing a practical blueprint for professionals ready to scale their skills into a sustainable, profitable business that avoids burnout.

Together, these courses offer a comprehensive pathway from understanding metabolic science to controlling human behavior and building a thriving practice.

The full conversation between Dr Hassina Kajee, Eli Bromley and Gwen Warren is now available. If you’re ready to upgrade your clinical practice and business, there’s never been a better time to start.

knowledge Patients transform Wont
bhanuprakash.cg
healthtost
  • Website

Related Posts

Blood test can predict which colon cancer patients benefit from chemotherapy

July 3, 2026

5 easy tips + a kid-approved menu

July 1, 2026

Healthy Raspberry Lemon Snack Loaf

June 30, 2026

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Nutrition

Why Knowledge Alone Won’t Transform Your Patients — And What Really Does

By healthtostJuly 3, 20260

Imagine this. A patient is sitting across from you. They understand everything you explained—insulin resistance,…

Blood test can predict which colon cancer patients benefit from chemotherapy

July 3, 2026

When You Can’t Trust Your Gut: What to Do About Diarrhea During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding

July 3, 2026

Junior Nsemba’s 3 best drills for strength, speed and dominance on the rugby field

July 3, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
TAGS
Baby benefits body brain cancer care Day Diet disease exercise finds Fitness food Guide health healthy heart Improve Life Loss Men mental Natural Nutrition Patients People Pregnancy research reveals risk routine sex sexual Skin Skincare study Therapy Tips Top Training Treatment ways weight women Workout
About Us
About Us

Welcome to HealthTost, your trusted source for breaking health news, expert insights, and wellness inspiration. At HealthTost, we are committed to delivering accurate, timely, and empowering information to help you make informed decisions about your health and well-being.

Latest Articles

Why Knowledge Alone Won’t Transform Your Patients — And What Really Does

July 3, 2026

Blood test can predict which colon cancer patients benefit from chemotherapy

July 3, 2026

When You Can’t Trust Your Gut: What to Do About Diarrhea During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding

July 3, 2026
New Comments
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 HealthTost. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.