4.1 Article

Improving food services for elderly, long-stay patients in Australian hospitals: Adding food fortification, assistance with packaging and feeding assistance

期刊

NUTRITION & DIETETICS
卷 69, 期 2, 页码 137-144

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-0080.2012.01587.x

关键词

feeding assistance; food fortification; food service; hospital; menu; packaging

资金

  1. Smart Foods Centre, University of Wollongong

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Aim: The study aims to highlight barriers and feasible opportunities to enhance nutrition support of elderly, long-stay patients in Australian hospitals. Methods: A total of 218 dietitians, nurse unit managers and food service managers from medical and rehabilitation wards of 184 hospitals completed a web-based survey about current practices, perceived barriers and priority opportunities to enhance nutrition support in their context. Results: Cook-fresh food was the most commonly reported food-service system (50%). Eighty-eight percent still used paper menus and one- or two-week cycles were the most common menu cycle lengths. Lack of choice due to special diet, boredom arising from the length of stay, a lack of feeding assistance, limited variety and inadequate flexibility of food service were the key barriers identified. Food fortification, assistance with packaging, additional feeding assistance by nurses, non-nursing feeding assistance and further nutrition assessment were key priorities for improvement. Conclusion: A toolbox of strategies is needed as no one intervention will improve nutrition support of all patients. Further practice-based outcomes and cost-benefit studies are needed to enhance support and advocacy for feasible food service interventions in the future.

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