American College of Nutrition

American College of Nutrition
Abbreviation ACN
Formation 1959
Headquarters 300 S. Duncan Ave. Ste. 225
Clearwater, FL
Website americancollegeofnutrition.org

The American College of Nutrition (ACN) is a 501(c)(3) charitable non-profit organization established to encourage the scientific investigation of nutrition and metabolism. The ACN publishes the Journal of the American College of Nutrition and hosts scientific conferences in the US and in Europe.

History

The American College of Nutrition was founded in 1959 with the stated purpose of enhancing nutrition and metabolism knowledge among physicians and professionals from all disciplines with a common interest in nutrition, and to promote the application of such knowledge to the maintenance of health and treatment of disease.[1]

Mission statement

The ACN says that its goals are to:

Structure

The ACN is governed by a member-elected Board of Directors. Committees are charged by the board with the responsibilities for the various operations of the ACN, and report to the Board of Directors.[2][3]

President (2011)

As of 2014 the president of the ACN was Harry G. Preuss, MD, MACN, CNS.[4]

Committees

European Chapter

The European chapter of the American College of Nutrition was established in 2001. In 2011 the ACN said that its European chapter had hosted eight scientific conferences.[5]

Membership

Members of the American College of Nutrition are clinicians, researchers and academicians, medical students, and international nutritionists. Categories of membership include Fellow (FACN), Master (MACN), Member, Student/Trainee, Emeritus, and Honorary.[6]

Two credentials may be granted to ACN members who meet certain criteria:

Fellow of the American College of Nutrition (FACN)

Minimum Requirements for Fellows of the ACN:

  1. Shall hold a doctoral degree from an institution recognized by an accrediting board authorized by the US Department of Education, or from a foreign institution with equivalent standards.
  2. Shall have demonstrated expertise in patient care, research, and/or teaching of nutrition as evidenced by one or more of the following:
    1. Certification by one or more ACGME recognized specialty boards
    2. Board certification by the Certification Board for Nutrition Specialists
    3. Outstanding experience in nutrition as a practitioner and/or educator, documented by appropriate letters of recommendations
  3. Shall have co-authored five or more publications in peer reviewed medical or scientific journals relevant to nutrition with lead authorship on at least one paper.[6]

Master of the American College of Nutrition (MACN)

This category is reserved for Members/Fellows who have demonstrated, over an extended period, outstanding service to the ACN or have been recognized nationally or internationally for outstanding contribution in the field of nutrition.[6]

Publications

The Journal of the American College of Nutrition (JACN) is a peer-reviewed journal published every two months by the ACN. It has an impact factor of 2.36. The JACN includes:

The JACN is abstracted or indexed in Current Contents, Index Medicus, MEDLINE, Science Citation Index, SciSearch, Research Alert, Chemical Abstracts, CAB International and BIOSIS.[7][8]

As of 2014 Taylor Wallace was on the editorial board[9]

Failure to disclose ties

According to the Integrity in Science project, the Journal of the American College of Nutrition failed to disclose the ties of the editor and authors of their June 2006 supplement on sodium to the food industry.[10] The Editor in Chief of the JACN subsequently published a letter in the Journal noting the ambiguity in the conflict of interest disclosure process then in place and a new documentation procedure was put in place to remedy this.[11]

Activities

Annual Nutrition Science Conferences

By 2011 the ACN had held 51 annual scientific conferences.[12]

Corporate funding

The ACN accepted funding from for-profit corporations until 2011. In 2011 the ACN changed this policy:

"The American College of Nutrition accepts no funding from for-profit corporations. This policy fosters our mission and our ability to advance unbiased science without compromise."[13]

See also

References

External links

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