Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2690412 Clinical Nutrition Experimental 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryBackgroundHospital malnutrition is a costly phenomenon as it contributes to complicate and prolong hospital stays. Optimal care of malnutrition requires the identification of patients at risk with an early screening: the latter is not systematically carried out due to lack of specific education, but also of time and user-friendly tools. The aim was to achieve a systematic nutritional screening of all hospital patients and to increase the recording of the diagnosis in the discharge letter.MethodsMultidisciplinary work group to create nutrition protocols and equivalences between three patient assessment tools: nursing ePA-AC, nutritional risk screening (NRS) and Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA-SF); mapping of the related variables of the 3 tools. Validation by the physician of automatically generates score triggers a dietician visit. Validation of malnutrition by the dietician prompts malnutrition diagnosis proposal for the discharge letter.ResultsAfter the pilot phase, NRS or MNA-SF scores are now available in all patients of the 2 first implementation sites (geriatry, surgery). Assessment of the patients stress level generated difficulties (over-scoring) that required additional teaching. Doctor validation of pathological scores has increased request for dietician visits. Economical impact of increased diagnosis in discharge letter is yet to come.ConclusionThe semi-automation of nutritional risk screening is possible without increasing the nurse workload, by mapping their nursing activities to specific nutrition scores adapted to the patient age. The increased diagnosis of malnutrition within 48 h of the hospital admission should lead to better care and optimize hospital reimbursement.

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