Nutrition Risk Measured Online in Community-Living Older Australians.

J Nutr Gerontol Geriatr

c Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond Institute of Health and Sport , Bond University, Robina , QLD , Australia.

Published: October 2019

Many community-living older adults experience the condition of malnutrition and the causes are complex and multi-factorial. This study examined nutrition risk in a sample of community-living older Australians (n = 77, age ≥65 years) using an online, self-administered survey consisting of two validated questionnaires (SCREEN II and SF-12). We found a significant relationship between health status and nutrition risk; those with higher self-rated health status had lower nutrition risk. Forty percent of the participants were categorized at high nutritional risk, 26% at moderate nutritional risk and 34% not at nutritional risk. The most common nutrition risk factors were: (i) weight perception (perceiving weight to be more than it should); (ii) food avoidance; (iii) low intake of milk, milk products and alternatives; and (iv) finding meal preparation a chore. Many nutrition-risk factors were consistent with population survey data highlighting the need for greater awareness of nutritional requirements for healthy ageing.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21551197.2018.1490680DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nutrition risk
20
community-living older
12
nutritional risk
12
older australians
8
health status
8
risk
7
nutrition
5
risk measured
4
measured online
4
online community-living
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!