4.7 Article

Nutritional Management in Adult Patients With Dysphagia: Position Paper From Japanese Working Group on Integrated Nutrition for Dysphagic People

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION
Volume 23, Issue 10, Pages 1676-1682

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2022.07.009

Keywords

Dysphagia; malnutrition; nutritional assessment; texture-modified diet; nutritional intervention

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [21H03390]

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This position paper by the Japanese Working Group on Integrated Nutrition for Dysphagic People provides a comprehensive overview of the nutritional management needs in adult patients with dysphagia, the issues faced by nutrition professionals, promising approaches, and future vision for nutritional care. The paper highlights the association between malnutrition and dysphagia and emphasizes the importance of nutritional assessment and intervention. It also discusses various nutritional interventions and proposes measures for nutrition professionals to consider. The paper calls for individualized and specialized nutritional management by registered dietitians as part of a multidisciplinary team, but acknowledges the need for more clinical practice and research in the field.
This position paper prepared by the Japanese Working Group on Integrated Nutrition for Dysphagic People (JWIND) aims to summarize the need for nutritional management in adult patients with dysphagia, the issues that nutrition professionals should address, and the promising approaches as well as to propose a vision for the future of nutritional care for adult patients with dysphagia. JWIND is a joint certification system recognized by the Japan Dietetic Association and the Japanese Society of Dysphagia Rehabilitation; its members are mostly experts known as Certified Specialist of Registered Dietitian for Dysphagia Rehabilitation. Malnutrition and dysphagia are associated with each other. Therefore, malnutrition detection and intervention are essential for patients with dysphagia. However, evidence on the usefulness nutritional assessment and intervention to ensure appropriate nutritional care remains insufficient. Here, we present current knowledge of the relationship between primary diseases causing dysphagia and malnutrition, the indicators used for nutritional assessment, and nutritional interventions such as texture-modified diet (TMD) quality improvement, oral nutritional supplementation, and comprehensive intervention. We also discuss the current status and issues in nutritional care for adult patients with dysphagia. Furthermore, we have proposed measures that nutrition professionals should consider based on 3 perspectives: nutritional assessment, TMD, and nutritional intervention. Individualized and specialized nutritional management by registered dietitians (RDs) through appropriate assessment of the nutritional status of adult patients with dysphagia is needed. To maintain and improve swallowing function and nutritional status, RDs should intervene from the state of risk or early dysphagia onset, providing individualized care per their expertise as part of a multidisciplinary team. However, systematic clinical practice and research regarding the association of nutrition with dysphagia are currently insufficient. Therefore, further clinical practice and evidence building, including the verification of the efficacy on nutritional support through intervention research, are needed. (C) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.

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