Development of a Nutrition Screening Tool for an Outpatient Wound Center.

Adv Skin Wound Care

Judith Fulton, PhD • Scientist • The Serena Group Innovation Lab • Rootstown, Ohio Brad Evans, BS • Medical Student • University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences • Ohio Stephannie Miller, MPH • Research Assistant • Akron General Medical Center • Ohio Kimberly N. Blasiole, MSN, RN, CWOCN • Clinical Research Nurse • Akron General Medical Center • Ohio Nancy Beinlich, MSN, RN, CWON • Director • Wound Center • Akron General Medical Center • Ohio Anita Meehan, MSN, RN-BC, ONC, FNGNA • Clinical Nurse Specialist • Akron General Medical Center • Ohio Claire Loose, MA, RD, LD • Clinical Manager, Nutrition Services • Akron General Medical Center • Ohio Raymond Leone, DO • Physician • Akron General Medical Center • Ohio.

Published: March 2016

Objective: To construct a quickly and easily administered nutrition screening tool using variables believed to be predictive of malnutrition risk in the wound patient population.

Design: A prospective pilot study assessed patients on a list of suspected variables, as well as the Scored Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA), chosen as the criterion standard. Variables were analyzed to select the most appropriate items for inclusion on a new nutrition screening tool using preliminary bivariate correlations and χ tests of association. Items significantly associated with malnutrition were dichotomized, and binary logistic regression analyses were performed to arrive at a final model. A sum score was computed, and receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to determine designation of risk.

Setting: An outpatient wound center in Northeast Ohio.

Participants: The pilot study included a convenience sample of 105 outpatients with at least 1 active wound.

Main Outcome Measures: Malnutrition as assessed by the Scored PG-SGA.

Main Results: The final nutrition screening tool, the MEAL Scale, is composed of 4 dichotomous elements: multiple wounds (number of wounds), eats less than 3 meals per day, appetite decrease (eats less than usual), and level of activity. These variables predicted 83.7% of the malnutrition cases assessed by the Scored PG-SGA. The receiver operating characteristic analysis showed an acceptable area under the curve (0.8581), and a cutoff score of 2 or greater was selected to indicate risk (median sensitivity = 91.4%, median specificity = 60.9%).

Conclusions: Although further studies of validity and reliability are necessary to establish the tool before widespread use, the MEAL Scale is a needed step toward nutrition screening in a wound patient population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.ASW.0000479803.09658.cbDOI Listing

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