Nutritional screening of elderly patients: a health improvement approach to practice.

J Hum Nutr Diet

Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, UK.

Published: April 2014

Introduction: Almost 60% of elderly care in-patients are at risk of malnutrition. Malnourished patients have poorer clinical outcomes and this is a key factor with respect to prolonging the length of stay. Since 2003, the Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST) has been advocated as a method for identifying these at-risk patients. Screening should take place on admission; however, the Trust has set a stretch target of aiming to document the score accurately within 6 h of admission.

Methods: Three 'care of the elderly' wards participated in the project. Each month, the timeliness (within 6 h of admission) and accuracy (compared to a dietician assessment) of the MUST scores on the wards were reviewed. Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles were used to rapidly test changes in the ward areas. Tests included a study day, one-to-one ward-based nutrition training, a focus on the use of alternative anthropometric measurements, the development of a training pack and the identification of the challenges for undertaking accurate and timely assessments.

Results: Baseline data identified that a MUST was documented in <60% of patients within 6 h of admission and that only 70% were accurate. After implementation of the change package, all the wards achieved an improvement and documented MUST within 6 h of admission; one ward achieved 90% accuracy in the scores.

Conclusions: Ward teams receiving training and monthly feedback of their results creates ownership, momentum and maintains enthusiasm for striving to reach stretch targets. The team continues to work on improving accurate nutritional screening across the Trust by using quality improvement methodologies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jhn.12073DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nutritional screening
4
screening elderly
4
elderly patients
4
patients health
4
health improvement
4
improvement approach
4
approach practice
4
practice introduction
4
introduction 60%
4
60% elderly
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!