4.1 Article

Comparison of three interventions in the treatment of malnutrition in hospitalised older adults: A clinical trial

Journal

NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Volume 70, Issue 4, Pages 325-331

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1747-0080.12008

Keywords

intervention; malnutrition; older adult; oral nutrition support

Funding

  1. Princess Alexandra Hospital Foundation Grant
  2. Lions Senior Medical Research Fellowship
  3. Office of Health and Medical Research Fellowship

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AimThe objective of the present study was to determine the most effective method for providing oral nutrition support to hospitalised older adult patients with malnutrition using clinical and patient-centred measures. MethodsThe present study involved consecutive assignment of 98 inpatients assessed as malnourished (Subjective Global Assessment B or C) to conventional commercial supplements (traditional, n = 33), MedPass (n = 32, 2cal/mL supplement delivered 60mL four times a day at medication rounds) or mid-meal trolley (n = 33, selective snack trolley offered between meals) for two weeks. Weight change, supplement compliance, energy and protein intake (3-day food records), quality of life (EQ-5D), patient satisfaction and cost were evaluated. ResultsWeight change was similar across the three interventions (mean SD): 0.4 +/- 3.8% traditional; 1.5 +/- 5.8% MedPass; 1.0 +/- 3.1% mid-meal (P = 0.53). Energy and protein intakes (% of requirements) were more often achieved with traditional (107 +/- 26, 128 +/- 35%) and MedPass (110 +/- 28, 126 +/- 38%) compared with mid-meal (85 +/- 25, 88 +/- 25%) interventions (P = < 0.01). Overall quality-of-life ratings (scale 0-100) improved significantly with MedPass (mean change, 12.4 +/- 20.9) and mid-meal (21.1 +/- 19.7) interventions, however, did not change with traditional intervention (1.5 +/- 18.1) (P = 0.05). Patient satisfaction including sensory qualities (taste, look, temperature, size) and perceived benefit (improved health and recovery) was rated highest for mid-meal trolley (all P < 0.05). ConclusionsPatients achieved recommended intake with supplements (MedPass or traditional), and despite lower cost, higher satisfaction and quality of life with selective mid-meal trolley did not achieve recommended energy and protein intake. Future research is warranted for implementing a combination of strategies in providing oral nutrition support.

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