Malnutrition is a widespread issue among older people, significantly impacting health outcomes. Nutritional interventions can improve health, but their success often depends on the attitudes and knowledge of healthcare workers. This study assesses healthcare workers' attitudes toward older people's nutrition using the validated Italian version of the Staff Attitudes to Nutritional Nursing Geriatric care scale (SANN-G), focusing on staff in nursing homes in Northern Italy. A cross-sectional study was conducted with 1789 healthcare workers from 41 facilities. The SANN-G questionnaire measured attitudes across five dimensions: nutritional norms, habits, assessment, intervention, and individualization. Data were collected online and on paper, with descriptive and inferential statistical analyses (chi-square and ANOVA) performed using R software (R-4.4.2 for Windows). Most healthcare workers were female (68.59%) and aged 41-50 (33.31%), with nursing assistants comprising 35.83%. Only 23.48% scored positively on the SANN-G scale, with most exhibiting neutral or negative attitudes. Healthcare workers who attended a malnutrition course were more likely to exhibit positive attitudes toward nutrition, particularly in the dimension of norms, assessment, intervention, and individualization. Younger healthcare workers, with the role of nurses and who attended a course on malnutrition, were more likely to have positive attitudes, while older healthcare workers and with the role of physicians tended to show neutral or negative attitudes. Education on malnutrition improves healthcare workers' attitudes toward older adults' nutrition, especially among younger nurses. The low percentage of positive attitudes (23.48%) underscores the need for broader education programs to enhance nutritional care quality.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics10010013 | DOI Listing |
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