1. Describing Community-Based Nurses' Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices in the Nutritional Care of Older Adults: Results of a UK Survey.
- Author
-
Shield A, Romano V, Robinson SM, and Witham MD
- Subjects
- Humans, United Kingdom, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Aged, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Geriatric Nursing education, Surveys and Questionnaires, Community Health Nursing, Clinical Competence, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
- Abstract
Purpose: To ascertain current nutritional knowledge and training needs of community-based nurses caring for older adults in the United Kingdom., Method: A descriptive cross-sectional, anonymized, online survey of nurses' knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to older adults' nutrition was developed. Community-based nurses working with older adults in the United Kingdom were recruited via social media and convenience sampling., Results: Responses were received from 194 community-based nurses. Nutritional care was seen as a multidisciplinary responsibility by 62% of participants. Most undertook nutrition screening (93%), were confident in providing nutritional advice (83%), and ease of identifying those in need (88%) was high. However, some aspects of nutritional knowledge were less complete, including recommended daily intakes of protein (60% unsure) and fiber (52% unsure)., Conclusion: High confidence in delivering nutritional advice contrasted with uncertainty around some aspects of nutritional knowledge, suggesting opportunities to improve training on the nutritional needs of older adults. [ Journal of Gerontological Nursing, 50 (11), 13-19.].
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF