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Best questions for patient survey about nutrition counseling

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Adam Sabla

·

Aug 21, 2025

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Here are some of the best questions for a patient survey about nutrition counseling, plus tips on how to craft them. If you want to build a survey fast, you can use Specific to generate your own in seconds with AI.

Best open-ended questions for patient survey about nutrition counseling

Open-ended questions let patients share their personal experiences, insights, and suggestions—so you get to the why behind the data. They're ideal when you want richer stories or to surface blind spots that multiple-choice can't uncover.

  1. What motivated you to seek nutrition counseling?

  2. How would you describe your experience with the nutrition counseling sessions?

  3. Which aspects of the counseling were most helpful for you, and why?

  4. What challenges did you face when trying to follow the recommended nutrition plan?

  5. How has your approach to food or eating changed since counseling?

  6. Can you share an example of a positive change in your health or lifestyle after counseling?

  7. Did you feel the advice was tailored to your individual needs? Please explain.

  8. What support or resources would have made following the nutrition plan easier?

  9. If you could change one thing about your nutrition counseling experience, what would it be?

  10. Is there anything else you’d like your nutrition counselor or our clinic to know?

Open-ended questions make it clear that you value your patients’ unique voices—and can surface insights you’d otherwise miss. Nutrition counseling has a proven effect on patient health; for instance, 62% of patients make dietary changes afterward, and 64% feel more in control of their condition, which often comes out in these deeper questions. [3]

Best single-select multiple-choice questions for patient survey about nutrition counseling

Sometimes you want to quantify opinions, spot trends, or make it easy for patients to answer without needing to compose long responses. Single-select multiple-choice questions are perfect for this. They help you measure overall satisfaction, set baselines, and understand which services or changes matter most. They're also useful to start a conversation that you can deepen with follow-up questions.

Question: How satisfied were you with your nutrition counseling experience?

  • Very satisfied

  • Satisfied

  • Neutral

  • Dissatisfied

  • Very dissatisfied

Question: Did you find the nutrition recommendations easy to follow?

  • Yes, very easy

  • Somewhat easy

  • Somewhat difficult

  • Very difficult

  • Other

Question: What was your main goal in seeking nutrition counseling?

  • Managing a health condition (e.g., diabetes, heart disease)

  • Weight management

  • General wellbeing

  • Improving athletic performance

  • Other

When to follow up with "why?" When you see a choice selected—especially a positive or negative outlier—it’s powerful to ask, “Why did you feel this way?” For example, if a patient says “Very dissatisfied,” a good follow-up is, “Can you tell us what made your experience unsatisfactory?” You get to the root cause, instead of guessing.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Sometimes patients have motivations or experiences you didn't expect. The "Other" option lets them clarify. With a smart follow-up, you can capture these unique insights and adapt your services to what really matters to patients.

NPS questions: measuring patient loyalty and advocacy

Net Promoter Score (NPS) asks patients, “How likely are you to recommend nutrition counseling to a friend or family member?” on a 0–10 scale. It’s popular for a reason: you get a pulse on overall satisfaction, referrals, and reputation in one shot. For nutrition counseling, it helps you quickly learn if your efforts are genuinely making an impact—whether people will spread the word, and who needs more attention. If you want to easily set up an NPS survey for your patients, you can use the ready-to-use builder here.

We’ve seen that one session of nutrition counseling can have real results—improved blood values and BMI in chronic disease patients, compared to those who didn’t receive support [2]. An NPS question can help quantify that positive impact as perceived by your patients.

The power of follow-up questions

Follow-up questions deepen the conversation and help you get beyond the basics. Automated follow-ups, like those offered by Specific, are a game changer—see our article on AI-powered follow-up questions.

  • Patient: "The advice didn’t work for me."

  • AI follow-up: "Can you say more about which aspects didn’t work or were difficult to implement?"

If you stop at the first reply, you’re left guessing what failed. Automated, contextual follow-ups bring clarity—in real time and without manual back-and-forth. That means more honest, actionable data, and less admin hassle for your team.

How many follow-ups to ask? In practice, two to three is enough for most questions. Specific allows you to set a maximum and skip ahead when you’ve got what you need, so patients never feel interrogated.

This makes it a conversational survey—it’s a real interaction, not a faceless form. Respondents feel heard, answers are richer, and everyone wins.

AI survey response analysis: Even if you collect lots of open-ended replies, it’s easy to understand them with AI. See how to analyze patient survey responses using AI to identify key themes, outliers, or urgent feedback—no manual slogging required.

These automated follow-ups are a new, powerful concept. Try generating a survey with Specific and see how much more you can learn from your patients.

How to compose a prompt for ChatGPT or other GPTs for nutrition counseling surveys

If you want to leverage large language models to write survey questions, start simple. Paste this in:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for patient survey about nutrition counseling.

Better results come when you give the AI context—describe your situation, goals, or patient demographics, for example:

We run a cardiology clinic and want to survey patients about their follow-up nutrition counseling sessions. Our goal is to learn what works, what doesn’t, and improve future care. Suggest 10 open-ended questions.

Once you have draft questions, get organized. Prompt:

Look at the questions and categorize them. Output categories with the questions under them.

Zero in on the topics that matter and go deeper:

Generate 10 questions for categories “challenges following nutrition advice,” “how counseling impacted daily habits,” and “suggestions for improvement.”

This iterative approach gets you the most usable, thoughtful survey possible—no guesswork, no blank-page paralysis. For a shortcut, Specific’s AI survey generator uses prompts like these (and more) under the hood.

What is a conversational survey?

A conversational survey turns the traditional static form into a genuinely interactive chat. The AI guides respondents, asks dynamic follow-ups, and adapts based on what’s said—just like a skilled interviewer would. This format feels personal, keeps people engaged, and increases both completion rates and honesty of responses.

Let’s compare:

Manual surveys

AI-generated conversational surveys

Handwritten, time-consuming, prone to bias and errors

Instantly generated from your goals & context with expert input

Static, non-adaptive, can feel like a chore

Conversational, adaptive, and engaging

Difficult to analyze open-ended responses at scale

AI-powered summaries, theme extraction, easy-to-use analytics

Why use AI for patient surveys? Because you’ll get more authentic responses, tailored follow-ups, and rapid insights you can act on—without the manual setup or analysis. With Specific, you instantly access best-in-class conversational surveys for patients about nutrition counseling, and deliver a feedback experience that’s smooth for everyone—including your team.

If you want to learn how to create a nutrition counseling survey step-by-step, see our detailed guide.

See this nutrition counseling survey example now

Act on what you’ve learned—see how our AI-powered conversational surveys can help you collect honest, actionable feedback from your patients about nutrition counseling. Engage, analyze, and improve faster with insights that matter—no manual wading required.

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Sources

  1. PubMed. Dietary counseling and oral nutrition supplementation in malnourished or at-risk hospitalized patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

  2. PubMed. Evaluation of a single nutrition counseling session for patients with chronic disease: improvements in blood values and BMI.

  3. PubMed. Inpatient nutrition counseling: percentage making dietary changes, patient satisfaction, and feelings of control after counseling.

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.