Nutrition-Mental Health Survey 2026

Join the conversation and play your part in helping to shape the field!

CNP is conducting a survey to help CNP better understand current perspectives and needs of the nutrition–mental health connection in education, research, and clinical practice.

Completing this 5-minute survey will help us identify barriers to collaboration between psychological and nutritional sciences and guide future program development, research priorities, and educational initiatives. Your responses are confidential and will play an important role in shaping resources that better serve our community. Thank you for sharing your voice!

Take the Survey
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Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis and DMHR

Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis and DMHR (Adult Population)

The CNP Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis (MGBA) & Mental Health Research Category consolidates research exploring the interconnected relationship between dietary intake, the microbiome, and the gut-brain axis in the adult population. To view each original study on the open internet, click “Original.” To view the CNP-written abstract summary, click “CNP Summary.” While only some of the CNP-written abstract summaries are available below for free, all abstract summaries are available to CNP members through the CNP Library Membership.

Dietary effects on human gut microbiome diversity

  • Karim Maghraby, M.B.B.Ch, M.Sc, Director
  • 14 January 2024
  • Reviewed By CNP STAFF
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This CNP Research Summary is protected. Become a CNP Library Member to access it.

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Related Studies

The food-gut human axis: The effects of diet on gut microbiota and metabolome

  • Karim Maghraby, M.B.B.Ch, M.Sc, Director
  • 14 January 2024
  • Reviewed By CNP STAFF

The objective of this 2019 review was to showcase the most recent evidence utilizing diet as a tool to exert positive effects, both directly and indirectly, on human health, via gut microbiota activity. It is the metabolites, formed by the breakdown of dietary components by intestinal microbes, that can be either harmful or beneficial and […]

Targeting the microbiota, from irritable bowel syndrome to mood disorders: focus on probiotics and prebiotics

  • Karim Maghraby, M.B.B.Ch, M.Sc, Director
  • 14 January 2024
  • Reviewed By CNP STAFF

Since there has been studies emerging showing the beneficial effects of probiotics and prebiotics by changing the gut microbiome, translating to its potential in treating many diseases, this 2018 review analyzed the current literature on the impact that probiotics and prebiotics can have on irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and on mood disorders such as anxiety […]

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