Objective: Assess the effect of intensive nutrition education by trained dedicated dietitians on osteodystrophy management among hemodialysis patients.

Methods: Randomized controlled trial in 12 hospital-based hemodialysis units equally distributed over clusters 1 and 2. Cluster 1 patients were either assigned to usual care (n=96) or to individualized intensive staged-based nutrition education by a dedicated renal dietitian (n=88). Cluster 2 patients (n=210) received nutrition education from general hospital dietitians, educating their patients at their spare time from hospital duties. Main outcomes were: (1) dietary knowledge(%), (2) behavioral change, (3) serum phosphorus (mmol/L), each measured at T0 (baseline), T1 (post 6 month intervention) and T2 (post 6 month follow up).

Results: Significant improvement was found only among patients receiving intensive education from a dedicated dietitian at T1; the change regressed at T2 without statistical significance: knowledge (T0: 40.3; T1: 64; T2: 63) and serum phosphorus (T0: 1.79; T1: 1.65; T2: 1.70); behavioral stages changed significantly throughout the study (T0: Preparation, T1: Action, T2: Preparation).

Conclusion: The intensive protocol showed to be the most effective.

Practice Implications: Integrating dedicated dietitians and stage-based education in hemodialysis units may improve the nutritional management of patients in Lebanon and countries with similar health care systems.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2015.05.005DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nutrition education
16
patients lebanon
8
dedicated dietitians
8
hemodialysis units
8
cluster patients
8
education dedicated
8
serum phosphorus
8
post month
8
education
6
patients
6

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!