NUTRITION AND DIET THERAPY
13TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)JOYCE ANN GILBERT;
ELEANOR SCHLENKER
TEST BANK
Reference
Ch. 1 — Introduction to Human Nutrition — Nutrition and
Health
Clinical Question Stem
A 54-year-old man with hypertension and a BMI of 31 reports
eating fast food 5–6 times weekly and rarely eating vegetables.
His fasting lipid panel shows LDL 160 mg/dL, HDL 38 mg/dL. As
a nutrition professional conducting an initial counseling session,
what is the most appropriate priority nutrition goal to reduce
his cardiovascular risk?
,A. Recommend a calorie-restricted, very-low-carbohydrate
ketogenic diet for rapid weight loss.
B. Encourage substituting one fast-food meal daily with
vegetable-based meals and increasing fiber intake.
C. Advise avoidance of all fats and recommend a fat-free diet
immediately.
D. Recommend doubling dietary protein intake to preserve lean
mass during weight loss.
Correct Answer
B
Rationale — Correct
Substituting even one fast-food meal with a vegetable-based,
higher-fiber option addresses both saturated fat and low-fiber
intake, improving lipid profile and caloric balance. This realistic,
incremental change is consistent with health promotion and
feasible behavior modification emphasized in introductory
nutrition principles.
Rationale — Incorrect
A. A ketogenic diet is not the first-line, broadly applicable
strategy for a patient needing sustainable risk reduction and
may be inappropriate without full medical supervision.
C. Total fat avoidance is unnecessary and can reduce essential
fatty acids and fat-soluble vitamin absorption.
D. Doubling protein is not evidence-based for primary
cardiovascular risk reduction and may complicate caloric
balance.
,Teaching Point
Small, sustainable swaps (add vegetables, increase fiber) reduce
cardiovascular risk effectively.
Citation
Gilbert, J. A., & Schlenker, E. (2024). Williams’ Essentials of
Nutrition and Diet Therapy (13th ed.). Chapter 1.
2️⃣
Reference
Ch. 1 — Nutrition Policy and National Health Problems
Clinical Question Stem
A public health nurse is designing a community screening for
nutrition-related chronic disease in a low-income neighborhood
with high rates of type 2 diabetes. Which program component
will best align with national nutrition policy goals and likely
improve early detection and linkage to care?
A. Free HbA1c testing with on-site brief dietary counseling and
referral pathways to community nutrition services.
B. Distribution of educational pamphlets about diabetes
prevention only.
C. Offering free gym memberships to attendees without dietary
assessment.
D. A once-year large health fair with multiple vendors but no
follow-up system.
, Correct Answer
A
Rationale — Correct
Combining screening (HbA1c), immediate brief counseling, and
clear referral pathways aligns with policy goals of prevention,
early detection, and linking high-risk individuals to nutrition
intervention — a practical, evidence-based public health
approach.
Rationale — Incorrect
B. Pamphlets alone rarely produce behavior change and lack
linkage to care.
C. Exercise access is useful but insufficient without nutrition
screening/assessment for diabetes risk.
D. One-time events without follow-up do not support sustained
care or policy objectives.
Teaching Point
Screening + immediate counseling + referrals improve detection
and linkage to nutrition care.
Citation
Gilbert, J. A., & Schlenker, E. (2024). Williams’ Essentials of
Nutrition and Diet Therapy (13th ed.). Chapter 1.
3⃣
Reference
Ch. 1 — Nutrition Guides for Food Selection