| Literature DB >> 34013590 |
Diana Cardenas1, Maria Isabel Toulson Davisson Correia2, Juan B Ochoa3, Gil Hardy4, Dolores Rodriguez-Ventimilla5, Charles E Bermúdez6, Karin Papapietro7, Régis Hankard8, André Briend9, Winai Ungpinitpong10, Katerina Mary Zakka11, Teresa Pounds12, Cristina Cuerda13, Rocco Barazzoni14.
Abstract
The International Working Group for Patients' Right to Nutritional Care presents its position paper regarding nutritional care as a human right intrinsically linked to the right to food and the right to health. All people should have access to food and evidence-based medical nutrition therapy including artificial nutrition and hydration. In this regard, the hospitalized malnourished ill should mandatorily have access to screening, diagnosis, nutritional assessment, with optimal and timely nutritional therapy in order to overcome malnutrition associated morbidity and mortality, while reducing the rates of disease-related malnutrition. This right does not imply there is an obligation to feed all patients at any stage of life and at any cost. On the contrary, this right implies, from an ethical point of view, that the best decision for the patient must be taken and this may include, under certain circumstances, the decision not to feed. Application of the human rights-based approach to the field of clinical nutrition will contribute to the construction of a moral, political, and legal focus to the concept of nutritional care. Moreover, it will be the cornerstone to the rationale of political and legal instruments in the field of clinical nutrition.Entities:
Keywords: artificial nutrition therapy; disease; disease-related malnutrition; food; health; human rights
Year: 2021 PMID: 34013590 DOI: 10.1002/ncp.10667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr Clin Pract ISSN: 0884-5336 Impact factor: 3.080