| Literature DB >> 34758733 |
Liz Payne1, Daniela Ghio2, Elisabeth Grey3, Joanna Slodkowska-Barabasz4, Philine Harris4, Michelle Sutcliffe5, Sue Green6, Helen C Roberts7, Caroline Childs8, Sian Robinson9,10, Bernard Gudgin11, Pam Holloway11, Jo Kelly2, Kathy Wallis12, Oliver Dean13, Paul Aveyard14, Paramjit Gill15, Mike Stroud16, Paul Little2, Lucy Yardley4,17, Leanne Morrison4,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the UK, about 14% of community-dwelling adults aged 65 and over are estimated to be at risk of malnutrition. Screening older adults in primary care and treating those at risk may help to reduce malnutrition risk, reduce the resulting need for healthcare use and improve quality of life. Interventions are needed to raise older adults' risk awareness, offer relevant and meaningful strategies to address risk and support general practices to deliver treatment and support.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; primary health care; Dietary supplements; Eating patterns; General practice; Health services for the aged; Independent living; Intervention planning; Malnutrition; Person-based approach
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34758733 PMCID: PMC8580738 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-021-01572-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Fig. 1Eat well, feel well, stay well: Booklets
Guiding principles for intervention development describing the key behavioural issues, design objectives and intervention features and components
| Key behavioural issues | Design objective | Key intervention features and components |
|---|---|---|
1) Denial of risk and low motivation to engage with lifestyle change: Older adults unaware or unwilling to acknowledge personal risk of malnutrition and its impact on health and wellbeing. Numerous physical and social barriers to eating well. | Motivate engagement with lifestyle change | • Provide credible evidence-based rationale • Dispel myth that decline in appetite and eating, and weight loss are normal and inevitable in older age • Clarify that everyone can be at risk of malnutrition • Outline that mainstream public health messages (e.g. low fat, low sugar) may be less appropriate for those with low appetite or unintended weight loss • Demonstrate empathy and acknowledge real barriers to changing eating behaviour |
| 2) Low self-efficacy to overcome physical and social barriers to eating well and make long-term changes, particularly resignation to age-related decline | Promote self-efficacy to manage malnutrition risk, and overcome barriers to eating well | • Positive tone to encourage beliefs about being able to overcome barriers • Align behavioural advice and support with need to be ‘well’ and ‘independent’ • Provide examples of small, easy to enact lifestyle-compatible changes • Allow self-tailoring to address personal barriers e.g. strategies for those who dislike eating alone • Offer longitudinal motivational support e.g. ongoing nurse appointments to encourage self-care • Support motivation in-the-moment e.g. suggest using visual cues (biscuit tin near kettle) to encourage eating between meals • Support personal goal and action planning • Provide stories to model successful ways to overcome barriers |
| 3) Rejection of imposed lifestyle change that contradicts existing knowledge, values and preferences, including desire to remain independent | Promote support and autonomy for choosing lifestyle changes that harness personally relevant motivations | • Present rationale for lifestyle change with a non-directive tone • Present behavioural suggestions as options to try • Invite expression of preferences e.g. possible reasons for wanting to eat well, with tick boxes for self-selection • Acknowledge and validate existing knowledge and experience before introducing new information and advice |
Characteristics of interview participants
| Think aloud: General practice | Think aloud: Snowballing | Process evaluation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 65–74 | 3 (13) | 1 (4) | 8 (44) |
| 75–84 | 7 (30) | 5 (22) | 9 (50) |
| 85–94 | 5 (22) | 1 (4) | 1 (6) |
| Missing data | 1 (4) | 0 | 0 |
| | 9 (39) | 7 (30) | 11 (61) |
| | 7 (30) | 0 (0) | 7 (39) |
| Cancer (not in current treatment) | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Cardiovascular | 7 | 3 | 8 |
| Depression | 1 | 4 | 2 |
| Epilepsy | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Eye conditions | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Gastrointestinal | 3 | 0 | 3 |
| Leg ulcers | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Musculoskeletal | 7 | 6 | 2 |
| Respiratory | 6 | 0 | 6 |
| Urinary tract | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| Missing data | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| n/a | |||
| 1–3 = Poor to very poor | 1 (4) | 1 (4) | |
| 4 = Average | 5 (22) | 2 (9) | |
| 5–7 = Good to excellent | 10 (43) | 4 (17) | |
| 2 (9) | 0 | n/a | |
| 7 (30) | 7 (30) | 8 (44) | |
| 2 (9) | 2 (9) | 2 (12) | |
| 2 (9) | 1 (4) | n/a | |
| 6 (36) | 2 (9) | n/a | |
| n/a | |||
| MUST score = 1 or more | 10 (56) | ||
| SNAQ score = 13 or less | 12 (67) | ||
| BMI = 20 or less | 6 (33) | ||
| Unintended weight loss in last 3 months | 9 (50) | ||
| 7 (100) | n/a | ||
Note: aSelf-related health: “How would you rate your overall health during the past week? On a score of 1 to 7, where 1 is very poor and 7 is very good”
b Self-report or nurse-measured MUST (Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool); SNAQ (Simplified Nutritional Appetite Questionnaire); BMI (weight/height2)
Key changes made to ensure intervention materials were optimally meaningful to older adults
| Purpose of change | Issues targeted | Examples and details |
|---|---|---|
| Strengthen perceived relevance of the booklets | Booklets not useful for those who already know about healthy eating and who are self-reliant | • Added emphasis that booklets provide new information on how eating needs change in older adulthood NOT general healthy eating advice • Added emphasis that suggestions in the booklets/goal setting can support continued independence and meeting eating needs • Added rationale that self-care ‘can help you to keep meeting your eating needs’ |
| Misunderstood purpose of booklets: interpreting them as purely promoting healthy eating rather than supporting eating for those with low appetite, weight loss or underweight | • Changed cover design to show varied high-energy food examples, including cake. • Entitled the main booklet ‘Meeting your eating needs as you get older’. • Clarified intended purpose on first page of each booklet (e.g. to address low appetite and unintended weight loss) | |
| Belief that weight loss is normal/inevitable and intervention not needed | • Clarified weight loss is not normal and highlighted the intervention can provide support to address reasons contributing to weight loss | |
| Booklets did not include enough information to suit individual needs and circumstances | • Expanded range of food suggestions to suit a variety of preferred and prescribed diets, following guidance from dietitians and nutritionists | |
| Acknowledge and validate users’ prior experiences | Booklets did not acknowledge the range of challenges experienced by participants | • Added acknowledgement that it can be difficult to follow the advice and suggestions when appetite is low or you are unwell or in pain • Expanded content to address specific challenges experiences by participants e.g. changing taste sensations, reasons for finding cooking and shopping a chore, preparing food when in pain |
| Booklets perceived as dictatorial and condescending | • The tone of the booklets was adjusted to offer suggestions to try | |
| Encourage participants to seek support | Concern that nurses and doctors did not have enough time to discuss the booklets | • Added a ‘talk’ symbol to indicate key sections where discussion with a nurse or doctor would be most useful (e.g. making plans and goals). • Clarified that other people could also offer support (e.g. friend, family member, carer) |
| Use appropriate language | Confusion about key strategies for increasing nutritional intake | • Simplified key strategies and renamed to ‘adding tasty extras’ and ‘eating little and often’ |
| Specific phrases were off putting | • Replace aversive phrases with participants own language (e.g. ‘eating more’ replaced with ‘eating regularly’ or ‘adding tasty extras’, ‘snack’ replaced with ‘small bite’ • Removed reference to ‘full fat’ or ‘sugar’ and included these elements within a range of examples, e.g. adding cheese, fruit, jam or honey • Rationale and stories added to emphasise and model the benefits of regular eating and drinking |