Every Trivane consultation follows a five-stage sequence: intake documentation, food-choice evaluation, calibration, seasonal plan composition, and structured follow-up. Each stage produces a written record. No stage is skipped.
Before the first session, each client completes a 7-day food diary using the Trivane intake template. The template maps meals by time of day, food group, preparation method, portion estimate, and accompanying fluid intake. Vegetables and fruits are recorded separately from processed foods. The diary is returned completed before the session begins.
This document is the foundation of all subsequent recommendations. The nutritionist reviews it prior to the session and marks patterns: missing food groups, over-reliance on particular categories, gaps in vegetable and fruit variety, meal timing relative to physical activity. The diary becomes the first entry in the client's consultation archive.
The first consultation session — approximately 60 minutes — is devoted entirely to reviewing the diary together. The nutritionist does not bring a prepared plan to this session. Instead, the conversation moves through the diary entry by entry, identifying what shapes the client's current food choices: routine, convenience, budget, habit, cultural preference, or activity level.
The evaluation produces a written summary: which food categories are well-represented, which are absent, and how the overall dietary composition relates to the client's stated goals regarding weight, energy, and active lifestyle. This summary is signed and dated — it is revision 01 of the client's Trivane record.
The calibration session maps the relationship between the client's current dietary composition and their activity level. For adults with a sport routine — running, cycling, gym, team sport — the session assesses whether food intake supports energy output, recovery timing, and hydration. For sedentary adults, it maps the gap between current intake and a diet suitable for moderate active-lifestyle goals.
Calibration does not involve extreme restriction. The output is a series of adjustments to existing habits: adding one vegetable category per weekday lunch, introducing a fruit portion in the mid-morning, adjusting meal timing around exercise. Small, documented shifts rather than wholesale replacement.
The 28-day seasonal eating plan is composed in the second session, using the calibration notes and the client's diary as source material. Plans are structured around Romanian seasonal produce: tomatoes, peppers, and courgette in summer; root vegetables, squash, and preserved greens in winter; brassicas and alliums in the transition months of spring and autumn.
The plan is written as a framework, not a rigid schedule. It identifies which food groups should appear at which meal, suggests preparation methods that suit the client's kitchen routine, and marks optional supplement windows where food-supplement use might complement dietary intake. The plan document carries a date, a revision number, and the client's intake profile summary on its cover page.
Plans are revised four times per year to reflect the seasonal cycle. Revision notes are logged against the original plan document, creating a readable history of how each client's dietary habits have shifted over time.
Follow-up sessions are scheduled at week four of the initial plan. At this session, the client brings a new 7-day diary completed under the plan's guidance. The nutritionist compares the new diary with the original, notes which adjustments took hold and which did not, and revises the plan document accordingly. The revised plan is issued as revision 02.
Ongoing clients in the Dietary Guidance Programme attend one follow-up per month. Each session produces a progress note added to the archive. The archive — a folder of dated, revision-numbered documents — is the most concrete record of how a person's food habits change over time through sustained, patient guidance.
Active ingredients in Trivane nutritional supplements are sourced from documented suppliers, with each batch accompanied by a certificate of composition. Sourcing prioritises suppliers whose facilities maintain food-grade processing standards. The ingredient profile for each supplement is documented in a lot record held in the practice archive.
Ingredient profiles in Trivane supplements are selected based on published nutritional research and undergo independent batch verification for quality and labelling accuracy. Verification reports are filed per production batch and available upon written request to the practice.
Trivane products are nutritional food-supplements registered with the applicable local regulatory authority under food-supplement classification. Products meet compositional and labelling requirements for nutritional supplement categories.
Each ingredient batch is traceable from the source supplier to the finished supplement unit. The chain-of-custody document is filed alongside the certificate of composition for every production lot.
Where the ingredient supply allows, sourcing is oriented toward European-region suppliers. Regional sourcing shortens the cold-chain, reduces transit time, and makes the origin-map of each ingredient more precise and auditable.
Each lot record carries: supplier name and facility address, ingredient common name and INCI designation, batch production date, independent verification report reference, and the Trivane archive entry number. Records are retained for a minimum of five years.
A consultation without documentation is a conversation. Useful in the moment, but unreliable as the basis for a plan that spans four seasons and multiple revision cycles. The Trivane methodology places the written record at the centre of the practice because it is the only way to distinguish real change from the impression of change.
When a client returns for a follow-up in month three, the nutritionist does not rely on memory to assess progress. The archive holds the original intake summary, the calibration notes, the first seasonal plan, and the week-four revision. Together, those documents describe exactly where that person's food habits were and where they are now. The revision notes themselves carry the date, the name of the nutritionist, and a one-line summary of the principal change observed.
This approach is slower than a one-session audit. It is also more honest. Dietary habits are formed over years; revising them requires months of patient observation, not a single session of corrective advice. The five-stage protocol exists to create enough documented contact to make that patience productive.
"Three seasons of records tell more about a person's relationship with food than any single intake review."
Schedule a first consultation and receive the Trivane intake template. Complete it over seven days and bring it to your first session. That document is where the work begins.