By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Nutrition & Dietetics Intake Forms: What Registered Dietitians Need to Capture at Client Intake

A registered dietitian who walks into a first session without knowing the client's A1C, current medications, or whether they have a history of disordered eating is working blind. Nutrition counseling is clinical work. It requires a clinical intake process. And yet most private-practice RDs cobble together a half-page form that collects a name, a phone number, and a vague "reason for visit" checkbox — then spend the first forty minutes of a sixty-minute session asking questions that should have been answered before the appointment started.

A thorough nutrition and dietetics intake form captures everything you need to build a safe, individualized nutrition care plan before the client sits down across from you. It protects you clinically, supports insurance reimbursement for medical nutrition therapy, and demonstrates to the client that you are a credentialed healthcare provider — not a wellness influencer with a meal plan template. Here is what that form should include.

Client demographics: the clinical foundation

Every nutrition assessment starts with the basics, but "basics" in dietetics means more than name and date of birth. Your demographic section needs to support clinical decision-making from the first line:

Reason for visit: clinical, not casual

A "reason for visit" field that reads "lose weight" or "eat healthier" tells you almost nothing. Nutrition counseling spans a wide clinical spectrum, and your intake form should present specific categories so the client identifies their primary concern and you can prepare appropriately:

Medical history: the medications matter as much as the diagnoses

Nutrition does not exist in a clinical vacuum. Every medical condition and every medication the client takes affects what you recommend, what you avoid, and what lab values you monitor. Your intake form needs two equally detailed sections here — diagnoses and medications.

Diagnoses

Medications and supplements

The medication list is not a formality — it drives your nutrition plan. Specific drug-nutrient interactions that your intake must surface:

Lab values

Request that clients bring their most recent lab work or authorize release from their physician. Key labs for nutrition assessment include CBC (anemia screening), CMP (glucose, electrolytes, kidney and liver function), iron panel with ferritin, vitamin B12, 25-hydroxyvitamin D, and prealbumin (a more sensitive marker of protein status than albumin, particularly useful in malnutrition screening). If the client has diabetes, A1C within the last three months. If they have CKD, a full renal panel.

Diet history: what the client is actually eating

This is the core of nutrition assessment, and it requires more than "tell me what you had for lunch." Your intake form should capture eating patterns with enough specificity that you can identify problems before the first counseling session begins:

Anthropometrics and body composition

Beyond the height and weight captured in demographics, your intake form should collect body composition data that supports clinical goal-setting:

Lifestyle factors: what happens outside the kitchen

Nutrition does not happen in isolation. What a client eats is shaped by how they live, and your intake form needs to capture the lifestyle factors that will determine whether your recommendations are sustainable:

Clinical nutrition assessment: nutrition-focused physical exam and malnutrition screening

For RDs working in clinical settings or with medically complex outpatient populations, the intake should include fields for nutrition-focused physical findings:

Insurance and billing: medical nutrition therapy coverage

Nutrition counseling is a healthcare service, and your intake form should capture the information needed to bill for it correctly. MNT is a covered benefit under specific conditions, and missing the billing details at intake means chasing them later or leaving money on the table:

HIPAA consent and authorizations

Nutrition counseling is a HIPAA-covered service when provided by a healthcare provider who transmits health information electronically (which includes billing insurance). Your intake must include:

HIPAA compliance in nutrition practice follows the same framework as other healthcare disciplines. Our HIPAA-compliant intake forms guide covers the regulatory requirements in detail.

Building a practice that documents like a clinical provider

The nutrition profession has spent decades fighting for recognition as a clinical discipline. Registered dietitians hold graduate degrees, complete supervised practice hours, pass a national board exam, and maintain continuing education requirements. The intake process should reflect that rigor. A thorough intake form — one that captures lab values, screens for malnutrition and eating disorders, documents drug-nutrient interactions, and supports MNT billing — communicates to the client, to referring providers, and to insurance companies that nutrition counseling is healthcare, not lifestyle coaching.

The overlap between nutrition intake and adjacent wellness disciplines is real but the clinical depth is different. Weight loss and wellness programs capture lifestyle goals and motivation, while health coaches focus on behavior change readiness and habit tracking. Nutrition intake goes deeper — into lab values, medication interactions, validated screening tools, and medical nutrition therapy protocols. The form should reflect that distinction.

If you are building documentation across a healthcare practice, the Healthcare Bundle includes nutrition and dietetics alongside 20 other healthcare categories, each with discipline-specific intake fields.

Nutrition & dietetics intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Client demographics, medical history, medications, diet history, anthropometrics, lifestyle assessment, malnutrition screening, MNT insurance fields, and HIPAA consent. Built for registered dietitians and nutritionists.

View Nutrition & Dietetics Forms