(Press-News.org) The American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) has published a position paper calling for the implementation of lifestyle medicine as a high-value care solution that delivers on the Quintuple Aim—better health outcomes, higher patient and clinician satisfaction, greater health equity, and lower costs.
The paper includes five position statements asserting that lifestyle medicine—a rapidly growing medical specialty focused on evidence-based lifestyle interventions to treat, reverse and prevent chronic disease—offers a scalable and sustainable approach to address the nation’s escalating chronic disease burden and unsustainable healthcare costs. Lifestyle medicine is practiced across primary and specialty care, inpatient and outpatient settings, in both one-on-one and group visits, and through both in-person and virtual modalities. The paper was published in the American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine.
“ACLM’s High-Value Care Framework redefines what quality care means in modern medicine, translating lifestyle medicine into a model that fulfills the Quintuple Aim,” said ACLM President Padmaja Patel, MD, DipABLM, FACLM, CPE, a co-author on the paper. “It aligns seamlessly with the full continuum of care —from prevention to treatment to remission—demonstrating that lifestyle medicine is not confined to one stage but is integral to them all. Lifestyle medicine is high-value care delivery. It offers a unifying framework that mobilizes people, teams, and systems to prevent disease and restore health.”
To create the framework, a task force was assembled of experts from fields that included family medicine, internal medicine, emergency medicine, endocrinology, cardiology, pediatrics, oncology, preventive medicine, and psychiatry, all with substantial experience practicing lifestyle medicine. The paper outlines five key position statements establishing lifestyle medicine as:
A care delivery model that addresses the escalating chronic disease healthcare burden
A powerful catalyst for healthcare transformation that delivers the Quintuple Aim
Whole-person care implemented for all populations, across various settings, intensities, and modalities
A model delivered by trained, interdisciplinary experts in chronic disease care across the continuum, including prevention, treatment, and remission of disease
Rooted in nine core elements essential to an effective and evidence-based lifestyle medicine care framework: accessible, comprehensive, high quality, integrated, whole-person, accountable, cost-effective, equitable, and achievable.
Chronic diseases account for the vast majority of healthcare spending and preventable deaths in the U.S. Despite spending nearly $5 trillion annually, the nation has the lowest performance on key population health metrics like life expectancy and mortality. The concept of lifestyle medicine as a framework for high-value care comes at a critical time, as ongoing efforts to reform healthcare and control costs—such as managed care and value-based payment models—have underscored the need for better coordination and accountability.
“This framework demonstrates how lifestyle medicine may be implemented at all points of care across the health system that makes high-value, whole-person care a reality,” said Lead Author Samrina Marshall, MD, MPH, DipABLM. “By empowering patients and supporting clinicians with training, certification, and practical tools, we can advance the Quintuple Aim and transform the health of our communities.”
About ACLM®
The American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) is the nation’s medical professional society advancing the field of lifestyle medicine as the foundation of a redesigned, value-based and equitable healthcare delivery system, essential to achieving the Quintuple Aim and whole-person health. ACLM represents, advocates for, trains, certifies, and equips its members to identify and eradicate the root cause of chronic disease by optimizing modifiable risk factors. ACLM is filling the gaping void of lifestyle medicine in medical education, providing more than 1.2 million hours of lifestyle medicine education to physicians and other health professionals since 2004, while also advancing research, clinical practice and reimbursement strategies.
END
American College of Lifestyle Medicine publishes official position on lifestyle medicine as a framework for delivery of high-value, whole-person care
The position paper from the medical and professional society for lifestyle medicine provides a roadmap with training, board certification, clinical practice toolkits, and numerous other resources to implement lifestyle medicine care.
2025-11-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Hospital infections associated with higher risk of dementia
2025-11-25
BUFFALO, NY — November 25, 2025 — A new research paper was published in Volume 17, Issue 10 of Aging-US on October 13, 2025, titled “Hospitalization with infections and risk of Dementia: a systematic review and meta-analysis.”
This large-scale meta-analysis, led by first author Wei Yu Chua from the National University of Singapore and corresponding author Eng-King Tan from the National Neuroscience Institute and Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore, shows that adults hospitalized ...
Thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy may increase autism risk in children
2025-11-25
WASHINGTON—Women with persistent thyroid hormone imbalance across pregnancy may be at an increased risk of having children with autism, according to a new study published in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
Maternal thyroid hormones are essential for fetal neurodevelopment. Gestational thyroid imbalance has been associated with atypical neurodevelopment, including increased risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Autism is a complex neurodevelopmental condition that affects how a person communicates, interacts with others and experiences the world.
“We ...
Cross-national willingness to share
2025-11-25
Global challenges necessitate cooperation beyond national borders. Prosociality—the tendency to share with and value the outcomes of others—can help achieve this objective. While it is well-established that people favor their own compatriots, people also display substantial prosociality toward individuals from other nations, though not all foreigners are treated equally.
Vanessa Clemens and colleagues invited 6,182 participants from 25 nations to take part in a sharing game with individuals from each of the participating nations. Each person received 150 “Talers” — a made-up currency — and chose between different ways of sharing the ...
Seeing rich people increases support for wealth redistribution
2025-11-25
If people do not observe inequality, they are less likely to favor policies that redistribute wealth, such as taxation—but they are also more satisfied with their lot, according to online experiments involving 1,440 US-based participants. Milena Tsvetkova and colleagues developed a model simulating how network structure affects perception of inequality and tested its predictions through an online experiment where participants voted on tax rates. In the experiment, participants were randomly assigned as "rich" (with scores around ...
How personalized algorithms lead to a distorted view of reality
2025-11-25
The same personalized algorithms that deliver online content based on your previous choices on social media sites like YouTube also impair learning, a new study suggests.
Researchers found that when an algorithm controlled what information was shown to study participants on a subject they knew nothing about, they tended to narrow their focus and only explore a limited subset of the information that was available to them.
As a result, these participants were often wrong when tested on the information they were supposed to learn – but were still overconfident in their incorrect answers.
The ...
Most older drivers aren’t thinking about the road ahead, poll suggests
2025-11-25
Note: December 1-5 is Older Driver Safety Awareness Week
When today’s older adults learned to drive, they might have heard the Beatles’ “Drive My Car” or Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run” on their car radio’s Top 40 station.
Now, 84% of people age 65 and older drive at least once a week, and 62% drive most days, according to a new University of Michigan national poll.
But less than half of these older drivers have made a plan for a time down the road, when changes ...
Earthquakes shake up Yellowstone’s subterranean ecosystems
2025-11-25
Up to 30% of life, by weight, is underground. Seismic activity may renew the energy supply for subterranean ecosystems.
Eric Boyd and colleagues chronicled the ecological changes in subsurface microbial communities that took place after a swarm of small earthquakes rattled the Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field in 2021. Subsurface microbial communities are powered by chemical energy gleaned from the interactions between rocks and water. Earthquakes can expose new rocks, release trapped fluids, and alter the flow path of water, together kicking off new reactions and changing the chemical “menu” for subsurface ...
Pusan National University study reveals a shared responsibility of both humans and AI in AI-caused harm
2025-11-25
Artificial intelligence (AI) is becoming an integral part of our everyday lives and with that emerges a pressing question: Who should be held responsible, when AI goes wrong? AI lacks consciousness and free-will, which makes it difficult to blame the system for the mistakes. AI systems operate through complex, opaque processes in a semi-autonomous manner. Hence, even though the systems are developed and used by human stakeholders, it is impossible for them to predict the harm. The traditional ethical frameworks thus fail to explain who is responsible for these harms, leading to the so-called responsibility gap in AI ethics.
A recent study by Dr. Hyungrae Noh, an Assistant ...
Nagoya Institute of Technology researchers propose novel BaTiO3-based catalyst for oxidative coupling of methane
2025-11-25
Perovskites—a class of compounds with a unique ABX3 structure and high temperature stability—are promising materials for energy conversion. In recent years, they have been utilized in photovoltaic systems. They exhibit excellent performance in solid oxide fuel cells and organic reactions such as oxidative coupling of methane (OCM) for the production of ethane and ethylene.
Notably, BaTiO3 is a promising perovskite with applications in fields including ferroelectricity, piezoelectricity, and semiconductivity. It possesses a flexible lattice and rich defect chemistry, making it suitable for structural modifications via doping for enhanced functional performance. Furthermore, ...
AI detects first imaging biomarker of chronic stress
2025-11-25
CHICAGO – Using a deep learning AI model, researchers identified the first-of-its-kind biomarker of chronic stress detectable through routine imaging, according to research being presented next week at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).
Chronic stress can affect both physical and psychological well-being, causing a variety of problems including anxiety, insomnia, muscle pain, high blood pressure and a weakened immune system, according to the American Psychological Association. Research shows that chronic stress can contribute to the development of major illnesses, such as heart ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Yale study challenges notion that aging means decline, finds many older adults improve over time
Korean researchers enable early detection of brain disorders with a single drop of saliva!
Swipe right, but safer
Duke-NUS scientists identify more effective way to detect poultry viruses in live markets
Low-intensity treadmill exercise preconditioning mitigates post-stroke injury in mouse models
How moss helped solve a grave-robbing mystery
How much sleep do teens get? Six-seven hours.
Patients regain weight rapidly after stopping weight loss drugs – but still keep off a quarter of weight lost
GLP-1 diabetes drugs linked to reduced risk of addiction and substance-related death
Councils face industry legal threats for campaigns warning against wood burning stoves
GLP-1 medications get at the heart of addiction: study
Global trauma study highlights shared learning as interest in whole blood resurges
Almost a third of Gen Z men agree a wife should obey her husband
Trapping light on thermal photodetectors shatters speed records
New review highlights the future of tubular solid oxide fuel cells for clean energy systems
Pig farm ammonia pollution may indirectly accelerate climate warming, new study finds
Modified biochar helps compost retain nitrogen and build richer soil organic matter
First gene regulation clinical trials for epilepsy show promising results
Life-changing drug identified for children with rare epilepsy
Husker researchers collaborate to explore fear of spiders
Mayo Clinic researchers discover hidden brain map that may improve epilepsy care
NYCST announces Round 2 Awards for space technology projects
How the Dobbs decision and abortion restrictions changed where medical students apply to residency programs
Microwave frying can help lower oil content for healthier French fries
In MS, wearable sensors may help identify people at risk of worsening disability
Study: Football associated with nearly one in five brain injuries in youth sports
Machine-learning immune-system analysis study may hold clues to personalized medicine
A promising potential therapeutic strategy for Rett syndrome
How time changes impact public sentiment in the U.S.
Analysis of charred food in pot reveals that prehistoric Europeans had surprisingly complex cuisines
[Press-News.org] American College of Lifestyle Medicine publishes official position on lifestyle medicine as a framework for delivery of high-value, whole-person careThe position paper from the medical and professional society for lifestyle medicine provides a roadmap with training, board certification, clinical practice toolkits, and numerous other resources to implement lifestyle medicine care.