| Literature DB >> 31443543 |
Emilie Reber1, Rachel Strahm2, Lia Bally2, Philipp Schuetz3,4, Zeno Stanga2.
Abstract
Malnutrition is frequent in patients during a hospital admission and may further worsen during the hospital stay without appropriate nutritional support. Malnutrition causes greater complication rates, morbidity, and mortality rates, which increases the length of hospital stay and prolongs rehabilitation. Early recognition of individual nutritional risk and timely initiation of a tailored nutritional therapy are crucial. Recent evidence from large-scale trials suggests that efficient nutritional management not only improves the nutritional status, but also prevents negative clinical outcomes and increases patients' quality of life. Multifaceted clinical knowledge is required to ensure optimal nutritional support, according to a patient's individual situation and to avoid potential complications. Furthermore, clear definition of responsibilities and structuring of patient, and work processes are indispensable. Interdisciplinary and multiprofessional nutritional support teams have been built up to ensure and improve the quality and safety of nutritional treatments. These teams continuously check and optimize the quality of procedures in the core areas of nutritional management by implementing nutritional screening processes using a validated tool, nutritional status assessment, an adequate nutritional care plan development, prompt and targeted nutritional treatment delivery, and provision of accurate monitoring to oversee all aspects of care, from catering to artificial nutrition. The foundation of any nutritional care plan is the identification of patients at risk. The aim of this narrative review is to provide an overview about composition, tasks, and challenges of nutritional support teams, and to discuss the current evidence regarding their efficiency and efficacy in terms of clinical outcome and cost effectiveness.Entities:
Keywords: efficacy; malnutrition; nutritional management; nutritional support team
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443543 PMCID: PMC6780521 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1The food chain [36]. The food chain has been adopted to emphasize that all stages in the provision of food must be adequate, from screening of patients and planning of menus to the distribution and serving of the food.
Figure 2Nutritional management structure, with the Bern University Hospital, as an example.
Figure 3Goals of an NST, modified after [43].
Figure 4Nutritional care algorithm.
Individual tasks of NST members [43].
| Professional Function | Nutritional Care Tasks |
|---|---|
| Nurse |
Gives advice on routes, methods, and systems for delivery of enteral/parenteral nutrition; Assesses adequacy of access to nutrition therapy; Advises on use of tubes, feeding pumps, and enteral/parenteral equipment; Implements and adapts protocols on methods of delivering enteral/parenteral nutrition to establish uniformity, save costs, and prevent mechanical complications; Educates on enteral/parenteral nutrition and highly complex nutritional therapy; Conducts research on complex nutritional therapy. |
| Physician |
Prescribes and manages enteral/parenteral therapy; Promotes the established nutrition therapy within the host specialty; Provides professional input for highly complex nutritional therapy; Supports ongoing research and projects on complex nutritional therapy; Informs colleagues, physicians in training, and members on the board of directors of the importance of good nutrition therapy on the ward. |
| Dietician |
Gives advice on enteral/parenteral nutrition (indications, choice of feeding solution, nutritional goals); Advises about options for enteral/parenteral nutrition and other nutrients (e.g., immuno-nutrition, vitamins, trace elements); Edits, implements, and adapts protocols on enteral/parenteral nutrition and complex nutritional therapy; Develops and interprets screening tools; initiates and performs nutritional assessment; Contributes to education and conducts research on complex nutritional solutions. |
| Pharmacist |
Provides logistical support for parenteral nutrition; Oversees and provides information about possible chemical/pharmaceutical interactions between parenteral nutrition components; Provides professional input on the composition of parenteral nutrition, on stability and compatibility of parenteral admixtures, and on drug/medication interactions with enteral/parenteral nutrition; Supports ongoing research projects on complex nutritional therapy, develops and implements parenteral nutrition protocols. |
Figure 5Nutritional risk screening 2002 [61].
Figure 6Strategy for nutritional therapy. The nutritional therapy is designed by an NST based on the patient’s needs and current situation. The most physiologic route of nutrition delivery is preferable. Nutritional therapy should be regularly re-evaluated and escalated if needed.
Figure 7Network of an NST. NST has a central role in the management of patients with complex nutritional therapy in the inpatient and outpatient setting, during the hospital stay and beyond.
Clinical studies showing efficacy and efficiency of NST.
| Outcome | Correct Indication | Cost Savings | Decreased Complication Rates | Reduced Mortality | Improved Monitoring | Increased Dietary Intake | Positive Influence of Individualized Nutritional Support |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Boitano et al. [ | Boitano et al. [ | Boitano et al. [ | Park et al. [ | Boitano et al. [ | Boitano et al. [ | Johansen et al. [ |