• Herbalism in Nutrition Practice CE Webinar

Herbalism in Nutrition Practice

(7 customer reviews)
CPEU/CEU: 1

$29.99

On-demand Webinar! Advance your clinical skill set with practical, evidence-informed herbal strategies for whole-body health. Learn how to integrate food-as-medicine through an herbal lens with practical approaches you can use immediately. Led by Integrative and Functional Dietitian and Clinical Herbalist Jenna Volpe, RDN, LD, IFNCP, CLT, author of the brand-new CE course Herbalism for the Health and Nutrition Professional: An Evidence-Based Guide to Integrating Herbs into Practice. You’ll learn:

  1. how to optimize immune health with herbal medicine.
  2. how to support the gut microbiome with herbal medicine, and herbal remedies for specific GI symptoms.
  3. common nutritive herbs, common herb classification methods, how to identify a quality herbal product, and much more!

This webinar is CDR-approved for 1 CPEU for RD/RDNs and DTR/NDTRs, and CBDCE-approved for 1 CEU for CDCES’s. Please note course expiration date below.

Learn How Webinar CEs Work

Course Expiration Date: 2/5/2029

CPEU/CEU: 1


Course Expiration Date: 2/5/2029. You have until that date to complete your CPEU Evaluation or Webinar Feedback Survey for this course.

How does testing work?

Learn more about course expiration dates.

The CDR Activity Number for this course is: 191606

Herbalism in Nutrition Practice On-demand CE Webinar

Course Type: 741—Enduring Activity

Suggested Learning Level: 1

About This Course

On-demand Webinar! Deepen your understanding of herbalism and how it can be applied to nutrition practice. Learn about core herbal frameworks and how herbalism intersects with nutrition practice to support overall health. Gain practical strategies to apply a plant-based approach across health conditions, and bring more value to your clients. Unlock the potential of evidence-informed herbal medicine to elevate health and well-being. Led by Integrative and Functional Dietitian and Clinical Herbalist Jenna Volpe, RDN, LD, IFNCP, CLT, author of the brand-new CE course Herbalism for the Health and Nutrition Professional: An Evidence-Based Guide to Integrating Herbs into Practice, this webinar will transform the way you approach client care.

Learning Objectives:

  1. State four modalities of herbalism
  2. State the most common methods of classifying herbs
  3. State four examples of categories of health actions and benefits of herbs
  4. State the health benefits and uses of three common nutritive herbs
  5. State the three primary approaches to support the gut microbiome with herbal medicine
  6. Describe herbal remedies for three specific gastrointestinal symptoms
  7. State five ways to optimize immune health with herbal medicine
  8. State four ways to identify a quality herbal product

Redefine your practice with evidence-informed herbal tools. Learn how to support client health with practical, evidence-based herbal strategies. Herbalism in Nutrition Practice webinar translates the science of herbal medicine into actionable strategies.

See the PIs tab for suggested Performance Indicators.

Herbalism in Nutrition Practice awards 1 CPEU in accordance with the Commission on Dietetic Registration’s CPEU Prior Approval Program.

Discover Skelly Skills’ other Functional and Integrative Nutrition CE courses.

Learn more about presenter Jenna Volpe, RDN, LD, IFNCP, CLT.

CPEU/CEU: 1
NOTE: Course Expiration Date: 2/5/2029. You have until that date to complete your CPEU Evaluation or Webinar Feedback Survey for this course.

1.1.1 Participates and documents engagement in professional development activities to maintain and enhance competence.
1.1.2 Pursues and embraces opportunities to advance practice.
1.1.3 Keeps abreast of changes in practice and in the practice environment that affect individual competence and legislative scope of practice.
1.1.5 Integrates new knowledge and skills into practice.
1.1.8 Collaborates with others, seeks counsel and makes referrals as needed.
1.5.1 Builds rapport and trust within relationships while respecting professional boundaries.
3.1.1 Assesses the communication needs of individuals, groups and populations to provide effective communication.
3.2.3 Delivers accurate and credible messaging.
3.3.2 Considers and respects the opinions, creativity, values, beliefs and perspectives of others.
3.3.4 Collaborates with others when knowledge, skill or experience are beyond their competence level.
4.1.6 Takes an active role in sharing information and knowledge.
5.1.1 Demonstrates effective problem identification and solving as well as professional judgment to address needs.
5.1.2 Interprets and integrates evidence-based research and literature in decision making.
5.1.3 Identifies misinformation and inaccurate information to inform decision making.
5.1.6 Recognizes situations where nutrition and dietetics services should be adjusted, limited, modified or discontinued.
5.2.1 Identifies potential or existing opportunities and challenges.
5.2.2 Understands impact of own values, beliefs and professional and personal biases on decision making.
5.2.3 Demonstrates insight concerning personal expertise and limitations.
5.2.5 Analyzes and synthesizes information and identifies new information, patterns and findings.
5.2.6 Integrates relevant information with previous learning, experience, professional knowledge, and current practice models.
5.2.7 Identifies and implements a plan to address opportunities and challenges.
5.2.8 Evaluates the effectiveness of plans and decisions and makes adjustments when needed.
7.1.2 Uses established guidelines to inform practice.
7.2.3 Analyzes and interprets data to form valid conclusions and to make recommendations.
7.8.1 Masters and maintains current and evidence-based knowledge within subject areas.
8.1.6 Identifies safety issues, risks, efficacies, benefits and limitations of interventions.
8.2.2 Develops and provides education on safe food procurement and handling and sustainable practices to prevent and minimize contamination.
8.4.7 Uses accepted benchmarking and best practices to inform practice.
9.1.1 Interprets and applies the appropriate evidence-based literature and standards for determining nutritional needs of target audiences.
9.1.2 Integrates knowledge of biological, physical, and social sciences with knowledge of food and nutrition to make decisions related to nutrition care.
9.1.4 Integrates knowledge of macro- and micronutrients for digestion, absorption and metabolism throughout the lifespan in practice.
9.1.5 Demonstrates knowledge of nutrient requirements throughout the lifespan, and their role in health promotion and disease prevention.
9.2.1 Engages in educational activities to maintain knowledge and to obtain new knowledge of diseases and clinical conditions.
9.2.2 Keeps abreast of and incorporates current evidence-based practice related to the management of diseases and clinical conditions.
9.2.3 Seeks and analyzes new scientific information and how it impacts medical nutrition therapy.
9.2.4 Integrates new knowledge of disease states and clinical conditions into practice.
9.3.10 Refers clients to qualified professionals based on needs when skill is beyond competence and scope of practice.
9.4.1 Gains an understanding of integrative and functional medicine models and interventions and how these models and interventions
are applied to nutrition and dietetics service.
9.4.2 Critically evaluates the credibility of integrative and functional medicine research and literature, using evidence-based criteria, to respond to inquiries and to determine the appropriateness of incorporating these interventions into nutrition care plans.
9.4.3 Critically evaluates the safety and efficacy of traditional and pharmaceutical models as it applies to nutrition and dietetics.
9.5.1 Plans and designs nutritionally sound meals, menus and meal plans that promote health and disease management and meet client needs.
10.3.1 Critically reviews and selects materials from credible sources to support the development of diet and nutrition education resources.
10.4.3 Assesses and identifies the current knowledge, skills, and cultural influences of populations.
10.6.6 Determines client/patient expectations and aspirations and manages situations wherein these expectations cannot be met.
11.1.3 Analyzes nutrition screening results to determine risk for malnutrition and/or other nutrition-related problem(s).
11.1.4 Determines appropriate service and referral needs based on screening data.
11.2.1 Selects valid and reliable tools to conduct comprehensive nutrition assessments.
11.2.2 Interviews clients/patients and reviews health records to collect information about medical history and food and nutrition intake.
11.2.3 Collects information related to client/patient use of medications, dietary supplements and integrative and functional medicines to identify potential adverse drug and nutrient interaction.
11.2.5 Conducts nutrition-focused physical examinations and analyzes findings to determine nutritional status.
11.2.6 Collects and analyzes anthropometric and body composition data to contribute to nutrition diagnoses.
11.2.8 Recommends and/or orders biochemical tests and analyzes results to provide evidence of a diagnoses and support plans of care.
11.2.9 Gathers and evaluates information that affects intake and nutrition and health status (e.g., behaviors, beliefs, knowledge, cultural, religious, ethnic, psychosocial, and social determinants of health) that influence nutrition and health.
11.2.12 Analyzes and synthesizes assessment data and findings to provide evidence of nutrition diagnoses.
11.2.15 Evaluate changes in measurable assessment data to communicate progress and/or resolution of nutrition diagnoses.
11.2.16 Compare and evaluate nutrition assessment data against appropriate standards and norms based on the client population, setting, and goals for care.
11.3.1 Establishes goals and desired outcomes in collaboration with clients/patients.
11.3.2 Determines factors impacting client/patient progress in meeting goals and resolving nutrition diagnoses; adjusts nutrition care plans accordingly.
11.3.3 Prioritizes specific nutrition problems to inform nutrition care plans and processes.
11.3.4 Selects interventions intended to resolve or improve nutrition diagnoses through addressing the causes and/or contributing factors.
11.3.5 Establishes and implements nutrition care plans, defining the time, frequency, and duration of interventions.
11.3.6 Develops nutrition prescriptions to communicate clients’/patients’ customized diet, considering client values and nutrition needs.
11.3.7 Recommends nutrition support, therapeutic diets and dietary and oral nutrition supplements.
11.3.8 Initiates or modifies orders for nutrition support, therapeutic diets and dietary and oral supplements
11.3.9 Leads the implementation of nutrition interventions in collaboration with clients/patients and the interprofessional team.
11.4.1 Identifies nutrition-related pharmacological agents and their actions on the body.
11.4.2 Demonstrates an understanding of pharmacokinetics, absorption, clearance, metabolism, latency periods, accumulation, half-life, and routes of drug administration.
11.4.3 Identifies potential food-nutrient drug interactions based on physiological responses to pharmacological agents and takes appropriate action.
11.4.4 Considers client/patient factors, nutritional impacts, indications, side effects, contraindications, benefits, risks, alternatives and foundational sciences when prescribing, recommending or administering nutrition-related drug therapy.
11.4.5 Implements, initiates, or modifies nutrition-related pharmacotherapy orders that address client/patient needs.
11.4.6 Monitors responses and effects of nutrition-related drugs and takes required action to make modifications or adjustments to treatment plans.
11.4.7 Evaluates, educates and counsels on the interrelationship and impact of pharmacotherapy on nutrients.
11.5.1 Reevaluates and adjusts plans of care to support client/patient health goals.
11.5.2 Monitors and communicates factors and barriers affecting client/patient progress in meeting goals.
11.5.3 Adjusts interventions based on client/patient progress in meeting established goals and resolving nutrition diagnoses.
11.5.4 Establishes new goals and nutrition care plans when original or interim goals are met.
12.2.1 Evaluates product characteristics, ingredients and claims to ensure accuracy and compliance with regulatory requirements.
13.4.2 Applies knowledge of local and global food markets, food production systems and nutrition regulations.


			

7 reviews for Herbalism in Nutrition Practice

  1. A. A., RDN

    Excellent course – lots of new (to me) and relevant information was provided.

  2. E. B., RDN

    I appreciated how herbs can play a supportive role in maintaining gut balance and strengthening immune defenses in a gentle, holistic way. Overall, I valued the integrative approach—seeing nutrition and herbalism not as separate tools, but as complementary strategies for building longterm health from the inside out.

  3. J. O., RDN

    Herbalism recently became a huge interest of mine and I appreciate this option being offered at Skelly Skills. This is a great way to introduce this topic to everyone in the field of nutrition.

  4. L. C., RDN

    This course was very relevant since many are looking towards including herbal treatments as part of their health goals and as dietitians promoting food as medicine it is important for us to have sound, scientific information on the subject.

  5. M. B., RDN

    Love the attention to detail. will definitely purchase the book and CE, as the webinar demonstrated it will be helpful for my practice!

  6. I. K., RDN

    I loved this course, I find this information so useful. It was a great introduction into this realm for me.

  7. L. M., RDN

    I really liked how the presenter tied in the herbals to different conditions and also how they work in the body. Very useful.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

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How Testing Works

Skelly Skills offers two types of Continuing Education (CE), also known as Continuing Professional Development (CPD). The two types of CDR-approved CE we offer are:

  1. Prior approved enduring (formerly known as self-study) CE courses using printed, online or eBook formats.
  2. Prior approved live, which are CE webinars.

For each of these types of CE, we offer Continuing Professional Education Units (CPEUs — also called CEUs, clock hours, or CPD hours).

Prior Approved Enduring (formerly Self-study) Courses

Our prior approved enduring CE courses all include a CE exam. This is important for some of you because you *may* be limited by the number of prior approved enduring (aka self-study) hours you can accumulate. For each course, you will need to complete the CE exam through our online testing system. It’s easy and you’ll get your CE Certificate of Completion as soon as you pass the course (or complete the Feedback Survey, in the case of our one-hour on-demand CE webinars).

Prior Approved Live (Live Webinars)

Our live CE webinars include a Feedback Survey. Within 24 hours of the live webinar, we will send an email with the Assessment ID and Key ID to complete the Feedback Survey through our testing system. Once you complete that, you’ll immediately be able to print and/or download your CE Certificate of Completion (it will also be emailed to you).

How to Purchase and Complete a Course

Step 1: Visit Skelly Skills and choose the topic and book or other course type you want to study. The number of CPEUs/CEUs/CPD hours are shown on each product page. Note to international customers: You can change the display currency using the icons on the right of the page.

Step 2: Pay online—you’ll get virtual courses immediately or else you’ll receive the book in the mail along with the CE exam booklet (we call this a ‘CE Evaluation’). Note: for books that we publish in-house, we include the CE exam and testing info in the back of the book, not as a separate booklet.)

Step 3: Study the course content. Once you have finished, complete the online exam at our testing site using the Assessment ID and Key ID (password) provided to you in the CE Evaluation, or on the course webpage if you are completing an on-demand webinar or online course.

That’s it! Once you have passed your exam, you’ll receive a PDF certificate of completion which includes the number of CPEUs/CEUs/CPD hours.

Key Facts About the Course Expiration Dates

  • Every one of our CE courses has an expiration date.
  • The expiration date is set by the Commission on Dietetic Registration (CDR) when they approve the course.
  • You must successfully complete your CE exam and/or feedback survey on or before the course expiration date.
  • Skelly Skills cannot extend the expiration date. You must request an extension in writing from CDR.
  • Skelly Skills does not offer refunds or credits for courses that have expired.
  • Please visit www.cdrnet.org for more information on expiration dates!

Learn How Webinar CEs Work

1.

Purchase your webinar and receive a link to the webinar immediately. 

2.

Watch your webinar and then submit the CE Feedback Survey form by the course expiration date.

3.

After submitting your CE Feedback Survey, you will be able to download your CPEU/CEU certificate as a pdf and keep for your records.

How Our CE Evaluation Forms Work

If you already have a copy of the book, you can purchase just the evaluation and reporting form.

  • Receive your digital CE Evaluation Form. You’ll receive a link to download and print a soft copy (PDF format) of the Evaluation immediately after purchase.
  • Find your assessment ID and password. Have your Assessment ID and password ready — they are located on the front of your Evaluation Form.
  • Access our testing site and complete the evaluation. All testing is completed through our online testing system.
  • Download your CE Certificate. When you’ve  completed your evaluation, you’ll receive a link to download your certificate for your records.

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