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Our current healthcare system, which is a costly and unending cycle of merely managing chronic disease symptoms, is failing us. What we truly need is a patient-centered approach that restores health by addressing not just diagnoses but also the physical, emotional, and social needs of each individual. This is the essence of whole-person health, and transformation toward this model of care is already underway.
This shift underscores why clinicians like me support placing lifestyle medicine at the foundation of health and healthcare. Evidence-based lifestyle medicine — which applies interventions in nutrition, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, positive social connections, and avoidance of risky substances to prevent, treat, and when used intensively, even reverse lifestyle-related chronic disease — is a medical specialty equipped to successfully address patients’ whole-person health in an effective, high-value clinical care delivery model.
As this transformation continues, here are four key lifestyle medicine trends for 2025.
Lifestyle Medicine Becomes More Ingrained in Primary Care
The 2021 National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine report, “Implementing High-Quality Primary Care” sounded the alarm about the state of primary care and outlined a comprehensive approach to transform it. Lifestyle medicine emerged as a solution as clinicians found innovative ways to integrate lifestyle behavior interventions into existing care models in a financially sustainable, scalable manner. Examples include Blue Zones Health, a new delivery model that aligns lifestyle medicine–certified clinicians with community and payers in California, and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center lifestyle medicine program, where primary care patients are referred to virtual group coaching, a teaching kitchen, and classes on food as medicine, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and more.
Organizations dedicated to advancing primary care are paying close attention to the potential of lifestyle medicine. Currently, The Primary Care Collaborative has launched a new multi-year initiative on whole-person care and lifestyle medicine. This initiative aims to broaden the primary care community’s understanding of whole health and lifestyle medicine concepts and the evidence behind them, as well as lay the groundwork for future work to promote whole-person primary care and lifestyle medicine among an engaged and committed community of members.
Digital Tools and AI Spark Lifestyle Medicine Innovations
American College of Lifestyle Medicine partner organizations are increasingly utilizing digital tools, such as health apps tailored to lifestyle behavior interventions, to expand access to care and support behavior change. One of the biggest challenges in lifestyle interventions is the limited time during patient encounters. But artificial intelligence (AI) tools can record (with patient permission) and summarize encounters, enabling clinicians to turn away from their keyboards and be more present to learn about the unique living, environmental, and societal factors that impact every individual’s lifestyle choices. AI tools can create individualized whole-food, plant-predominant meal plans or physical activity schedules for patients in just a few seconds. The potential for AI in lifestyle medicine is vast, and its applications were further explored at the American College of Lifestyle Medicine’s annual conference in October.
Behavior Change and Sustainability of the Food-as-Medicine Movement
Significant investments have been made in food as medicine to address diet-related chronic diseases. But merely providing medically tailored meals or produce prescriptions is not enough because once the prescriptions end, so will the health benefits. Clinicians certified in lifestyle medicine are prepared to coach patients into long-term behavior change, supporting them with education and information to shop for and prepare tasty, nutritious, and affordable food. The same applies to the use of glucagon-like peptide 1 drugs. Although the initial weight loss offers motivation, lifestyle changes are necessary to sustain long-term health benefits beyond medications.
Lifestyle Medicine Emerges as a Strategy to Achieve Health Equity
Lifestyle behavior interventions have the unique ability to address health status and social drivers of health. For example, food as medicine affects an individual’s health while also addressing nutrition security. Certainly, no medication can both improve health status and feed someone. The addition of payment for the screening of social drivers of health to the 2024 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule is an important step toward connecting clinicians with community health–based organizations that can address factors that influence patients’ ability to adhere to lifestyle behavior care plans. Lifestyle medicine clinicians are poised to lead this effort because they are already having conversations with patients about their environment, living conditions, and access to nutritious food.
The changes coming to our healthcare system are exciting and long overdue. Lifestyle medicine is positioned to be at the forefront of this transformation now and in the future.
Dr. Patel, president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine in St. Louis, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Our current healthcare system, which is a costly and unending cycle of merely managing chronic disease symptoms, is failing us. What we truly need is a patient-centered approach that restores health by addressing not just diagnoses but also the physical, emotional, and social needs of each individual. This is the essence of whole-person health, and transformation toward this model of care is already underway.
This shift underscores why clinicians like me support placing lifestyle medicine at the foundation of health and healthcare. Evidence-based lifestyle medicine — which applies interventions in nutrition, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, positive social connections, and avoidance of risky substances to prevent, treat, and when used intensively, even reverse lifestyle-related chronic disease — is a medical specialty equipped to successfully address patients’ whole-person health in an effective, high-value clinical care delivery model.
As this transformation continues, here are four key lifestyle medicine trends for 2025.
Lifestyle Medicine Becomes More Ingrained in Primary Care
The 2021 National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine report, “Implementing High-Quality Primary Care” sounded the alarm about the state of primary care and outlined a comprehensive approach to transform it. Lifestyle medicine emerged as a solution as clinicians found innovative ways to integrate lifestyle behavior interventions into existing care models in a financially sustainable, scalable manner. Examples include Blue Zones Health, a new delivery model that aligns lifestyle medicine–certified clinicians with community and payers in California, and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center lifestyle medicine program, where primary care patients are referred to virtual group coaching, a teaching kitchen, and classes on food as medicine, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and more.
Organizations dedicated to advancing primary care are paying close attention to the potential of lifestyle medicine. Currently, The Primary Care Collaborative has launched a new multi-year initiative on whole-person care and lifestyle medicine. This initiative aims to broaden the primary care community’s understanding of whole health and lifestyle medicine concepts and the evidence behind them, as well as lay the groundwork for future work to promote whole-person primary care and lifestyle medicine among an engaged and committed community of members.
Digital Tools and AI Spark Lifestyle Medicine Innovations
American College of Lifestyle Medicine partner organizations are increasingly utilizing digital tools, such as health apps tailored to lifestyle behavior interventions, to expand access to care and support behavior change. One of the biggest challenges in lifestyle interventions is the limited time during patient encounters. But artificial intelligence (AI) tools can record (with patient permission) and summarize encounters, enabling clinicians to turn away from their keyboards and be more present to learn about the unique living, environmental, and societal factors that impact every individual’s lifestyle choices. AI tools can create individualized whole-food, plant-predominant meal plans or physical activity schedules for patients in just a few seconds. The potential for AI in lifestyle medicine is vast, and its applications were further explored at the American College of Lifestyle Medicine’s annual conference in October.
Behavior Change and Sustainability of the Food-as-Medicine Movement
Significant investments have been made in food as medicine to address diet-related chronic diseases. But merely providing medically tailored meals or produce prescriptions is not enough because once the prescriptions end, so will the health benefits. Clinicians certified in lifestyle medicine are prepared to coach patients into long-term behavior change, supporting them with education and information to shop for and prepare tasty, nutritious, and affordable food. The same applies to the use of glucagon-like peptide 1 drugs. Although the initial weight loss offers motivation, lifestyle changes are necessary to sustain long-term health benefits beyond medications.
Lifestyle Medicine Emerges as a Strategy to Achieve Health Equity
Lifestyle behavior interventions have the unique ability to address health status and social drivers of health. For example, food as medicine affects an individual’s health while also addressing nutrition security. Certainly, no medication can both improve health status and feed someone. The addition of payment for the screening of social drivers of health to the 2024 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule is an important step toward connecting clinicians with community health–based organizations that can address factors that influence patients’ ability to adhere to lifestyle behavior care plans. Lifestyle medicine clinicians are poised to lead this effort because they are already having conversations with patients about their environment, living conditions, and access to nutritious food.
The changes coming to our healthcare system are exciting and long overdue. Lifestyle medicine is positioned to be at the forefront of this transformation now and in the future.
Dr. Patel, president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine in St. Louis, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Our current healthcare system, which is a costly and unending cycle of merely managing chronic disease symptoms, is failing us. What we truly need is a patient-centered approach that restores health by addressing not just diagnoses but also the physical, emotional, and social needs of each individual. This is the essence of whole-person health, and transformation toward this model of care is already underway.
This shift underscores why clinicians like me support placing lifestyle medicine at the foundation of health and healthcare. Evidence-based lifestyle medicine — which applies interventions in nutrition, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, positive social connections, and avoidance of risky substances to prevent, treat, and when used intensively, even reverse lifestyle-related chronic disease — is a medical specialty equipped to successfully address patients’ whole-person health in an effective, high-value clinical care delivery model.
As this transformation continues, here are four key lifestyle medicine trends for 2025.
Lifestyle Medicine Becomes More Ingrained in Primary Care
The 2021 National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine report, “Implementing High-Quality Primary Care” sounded the alarm about the state of primary care and outlined a comprehensive approach to transform it. Lifestyle medicine emerged as a solution as clinicians found innovative ways to integrate lifestyle behavior interventions into existing care models in a financially sustainable, scalable manner. Examples include Blue Zones Health, a new delivery model that aligns lifestyle medicine–certified clinicians with community and payers in California, and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center lifestyle medicine program, where primary care patients are referred to virtual group coaching, a teaching kitchen, and classes on food as medicine, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and more.
Organizations dedicated to advancing primary care are paying close attention to the potential of lifestyle medicine. Currently, The Primary Care Collaborative has launched a new multi-year initiative on whole-person care and lifestyle medicine. This initiative aims to broaden the primary care community’s understanding of whole health and lifestyle medicine concepts and the evidence behind them, as well as lay the groundwork for future work to promote whole-person primary care and lifestyle medicine among an engaged and committed community of members.
Digital Tools and AI Spark Lifestyle Medicine Innovations
American College of Lifestyle Medicine partner organizations are increasingly utilizing digital tools, such as health apps tailored to lifestyle behavior interventions, to expand access to care and support behavior change. One of the biggest challenges in lifestyle interventions is the limited time during patient encounters. But artificial intelligence (AI) tools can record (with patient permission) and summarize encounters, enabling clinicians to turn away from their keyboards and be more present to learn about the unique living, environmental, and societal factors that impact every individual’s lifestyle choices. AI tools can create individualized whole-food, plant-predominant meal plans or physical activity schedules for patients in just a few seconds. The potential for AI in lifestyle medicine is vast, and its applications were further explored at the American College of Lifestyle Medicine’s annual conference in October.
Behavior Change and Sustainability of the Food-as-Medicine Movement
Significant investments have been made in food as medicine to address diet-related chronic diseases. But merely providing medically tailored meals or produce prescriptions is not enough because once the prescriptions end, so will the health benefits. Clinicians certified in lifestyle medicine are prepared to coach patients into long-term behavior change, supporting them with education and information to shop for and prepare tasty, nutritious, and affordable food. The same applies to the use of glucagon-like peptide 1 drugs. Although the initial weight loss offers motivation, lifestyle changes are necessary to sustain long-term health benefits beyond medications.
Lifestyle Medicine Emerges as a Strategy to Achieve Health Equity
Lifestyle behavior interventions have the unique ability to address health status and social drivers of health. For example, food as medicine affects an individual’s health while also addressing nutrition security. Certainly, no medication can both improve health status and feed someone. The addition of payment for the screening of social drivers of health to the 2024 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule is an important step toward connecting clinicians with community health–based organizations that can address factors that influence patients’ ability to adhere to lifestyle behavior care plans. Lifestyle medicine clinicians are poised to lead this effort because they are already having conversations with patients about their environment, living conditions, and access to nutritious food.
The changes coming to our healthcare system are exciting and long overdue. Lifestyle medicine is positioned to be at the forefront of this transformation now and in the future.
Dr. Patel, president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine in St. Louis, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.