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Predictors of dietitian consult on medical and surgical wards

Authors :
Paule Bernier
Donald R. Duerksen
Bridget Davidson
Khursheed N. Jeejeebhoy
Hélène Payette
Manon Laporte
Johane P. Allard
Heather H. Keller
Leah Gramlich
Source :
Clinical Nutrition. 34:1141-1145
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Guidelines promote dietitian consult (DC) for nutrition support. In Canada, dietitians are involved in the assessment of malnutrition and provide specialized dietary counseling. It is unknown however, what leads to a DC for patients fed orally. This study identifies independent predictors for a DC and determines what is the proportion of malnourished patients seeing a dietitian.The Canadian Malnutrition Task Force conducted a prospective cohort study in medical and surgical wards of 18 Canadian hospitals. 947 patients who did not receive enteral or parenteral nutrition were analyzed. At admission, subjective global assessment (SGA), body mass index, patient demography were collected. During hospitalization clinical data, including dietary intake and presence of a DC were obtained. Multivariate logistic regression was completed with dietitian consult ≤ 3 days and 4 + days as the outcome variables.The prevalence of malnutrition (SGA B + C) was 45%. Dietitians were consulted for 23% of patients, and of these consults 44% were well nourished (SGA-A), 37% were mildly/moderately malnourished (SGA-B), and 19% were severely malnourished (SGA-C). DC missed 75% of the SGA-B and 60% of SGA-C patients. Predictors of consultation within 3 days of hospitalization were: renal diet (OR 5.75) modified texture diet (OR 5.38), metabolic diagnosis (3.91), ONS use pre-admission (OR 2.33), severe malnutrition (SGA-C, OR 1.88) and age (OR 0.98). Predictors for 4 + days were: dysphagia (OR 11.4), a new medical diagnosis (OR 2.3), severe malnutrition (OR 2.17), constipation (OR 2.16), more than one diagnosis (OR 1.8), antibiotic use (OR 1.6), and male gender (OR 1.6). Consuming50% of food in the first week was not a predictor as only 19% of those with low intake had a DC at 4 + days.Overall predictors of DC were appropriate but SGA B and C patients and those eating50% were missed. Screening at admission with algorithms of care that include referral to the dietitian are needed to improve the process of nutrition care.

Details

ISSN :
02615614
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52dacb90ba66bddc3a431bad93a0cde8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clnu.2014.11.011