|
FYI (For Your Information)
FYI, outside the US, many people spell dietitian
as dietician (a tic in the middle) and in the United States,
dietitian is spelled dietitian (a tit in the middle). Since
the internet is worldwide, either spelling would be correct.
FYI, some states now have licensure that restricts
who can provide nutrition advice within a state. Check on licensure
with your state dietetic association which is probably located
in the capital of the state in which you live.
FYI, dietitians are 97% white female. The American
Dietetic Association periodically surveys its members and publishes
the results of those surveys in the Journal of the American
Dietetic Association. The last salary survey was published in
1996 and should be available in the library of any college with
a dietetics program or medical school. Salaries vary depending
on whether you choose clinical (hospital, our patient clinic
or nursing home), food service or private practice. Health clubs
or corporate wellness programs may be a better mix of your degrees
if you have both exercise physiology and nutrition. Lastly,
positions for dietitians in some areas are tight due to the
fact that dietitians tend to stay close to home as many have
families. Before you spend the time educating yourself to become
a Registered Dietitian, check with your state's dietetic association
for job openings and state salary ranges as well as colleges
with programs.
FYI, Dietetics is opening up beyond the traditional
health care job though the majority of dietitians still work
in hospitals, nursing homes or outpatient clinics. Public health
nutritionists have a master's degree in nutrition and are usually
registered dietitians. They often work in county, state and
federal programs with a nutrition component like WIC, EFNEP,
school lunch, etc. Call your state public health department
and ask to talk to a dietitian about their job. If you want
to become a registered dietitian, you will need an internship
or graduate degree with work experience. Check out the American
Dietetic Association home page for information on careers and
colleges in dietetics.
First check out the American Dietetic Association home page
as the answers to many of your questions are there. ADA has
a list at their web site of colleges that offer dietetics programs.
You will need a four year college degree plus an internship
(9 months to 1 year after college) to become a registered dietitian
or a two year degree and clinical experience to become a registered
dietetic technician. Dietetic technicians assist dietitians
and do similar work.
If you have an interest in food and how it nourishes
the body or wellness and health, dietetics may be for you. I
went into dietetics because I loved to cook and a girlfriend's
father who was president of Cellu Featherweight food company
talked to me about becoming a dietitian. Cellu Featherweight
makes dietetic foods that can be bought in grocery stores. Food
companies usually hire food technologists to design new foods.
Check out the Institute of Food Technologists.
The advantages are you work when people eat and
are awake which is 6 AM to 7 PM, so no shift work like nursing
or other health care careers, but you may have to work weekends
and holidays. It's exciting to see a person get better by changing
what or when they eat. You don't have to know how to cook or
even like cooking to become a dietitian. The disadvantages are
that dietitians are 97% female who are not unionized and therefore,
beginning salary can be under $30,000 per year for a new graduate.
The American Dietetic Association periodically does surveys
of members to determine what type of work members perform and
what they are getting paid for that work.
Most dietitians work with patients (clinical dietitians)
or work with food service (administrative dietitians) either
in hospitals, nursing homes or out patient clinics. Some clinical
dietitians work in private practice (counsel patients), perform
nutrition research, consult with smaller health care facilities
or teach in colleges / universities. Other dietitians work for
companies who sell food products, a few work in media and communications
(TV, radio, newspaper) or some work with athletes or professional
sports teams. There are different areas of practice that dietitians
work in / with such as public health, senior citizens, mental
health, cancer, renal (kidney), children (pediatrics), diabetes,
rehabilitation, sports & wellness or school food service.
Call your local hospital or clinic and ask to
talk to a dietitian. Most would be happy to show you around
and tell you what a typical day is like. Ask lots of questions
like "how did you get interested in becoming a dietitian"
or "where did you go to school". To become a dietitian,
you will need to major in dietetics or nutrition. Your minor
could be in chemistry, business or counseling depending on whether
you want to be a clinical or administrative dietitian. You don't
have to make a decision about your area of practice (i.e. diabetes
or children) until you graduate, but you should decide if you
want to work with patients (clinical) or food (administrative)
as that will determine the courses you take the last 2 years
of college.
|