AI Article Synopsis

  • NutritionDay is a global study that tracks malnutrition and nutritional risk among hospitalized patients, with a focus on Chinese inpatients in a survey conducted on November 7, 2019.
  • The study included 875 patients and found a malnutrition rate of 11.6% and a nutritional risk incidence of 17.8%, linking factors like tumor load and self-rated health to malnutrition.
  • Overall, about 29.4% of patients were identified as malnourished or at nutritional risk, resulting in longer hospital stays and lower rehabilitation rates, highlighting the need for increased awareness and support for these patients.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: NutritionDay is a yearly global point-prevalence study of malnutrition or nutritional risk in hospitals. We aimed to provide a comprehensive nutritional survey of hospitalized patients and analyze the risk factors of malnutrition and prolonged hospitalization in Chinese inpatients.

Methods And Study Design: The international daylong cross-sectional survey was performed on November 07th, 2019. Ten hospitals were invited to participate in this NutritionDay survey. Nutritional risk was identified by nutritional risk screening 2002, and malnutrition was identified by the ESPEN criteria. We measured the incidence of malnutrition and nutritional risk. And we analysed risk factors for malnutrition and length of stay in Chinese hospitalized patients.

Results: 875 hospitalized patients from 6 departments were included in the analysis. The malnutrition rate was 11.6% and the incidence of nutritional risk was 17.8%. It was analyzed that tumor load, end-stage disease, motility, self-rated health, types of oral medicine, and food intake during the past week were independent risk factors for malnutrition or nutritional risk. 56.2% (118/210) of patients at nutritional risk or malnutrition received extra nutritional support, whereas 22.5% (88/391) well-nourished patients did. Moreover, nutrition status, ever stayed in ICU and self-rated health were associated with prolonged length of stay.

Conclusions: In a word, the prevalence of malnutrition or nutritional risk was about 29.4%. Patients with malnutrition or nutritional risk had a higher transfer rate, lower rehabilitation rate and longer hospital stays. The attention to malnutrition patients needs to be further strengthened.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.6133/apjcn.202209_31(3).0024DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nutritional risk
36
malnutrition nutritional
20
risk factors
16
risk
13
malnutrition
12
factors malnutrition
12
nutritional
11
malnutrition length
8
length stay
8
hospitalized patients
8

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!