An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia

People with dementia frequently develop dysphagia (swallowing impairment), which causes them to be at high risk of aspiration pneumonia, resulting in hospital admissions. These individuals are advised against alternative nutrition and hydration as this does not eliminate the risk of developing chest...

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Main Author: Dharinee Hansjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Geriatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2308-3417/3/4/65
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spelling doaj-6c013867d65a406dae0b4dae8a0cb0082020-11-25T01:14:09ZengMDPI AGGeriatrics2308-34172018-10-01346510.3390/geriatrics3040065geriatrics3040065An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and DysphagiaDharinee Hansjee0Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Trust, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, London, SE18 4QH, UKPeople with dementia frequently develop dysphagia (swallowing impairment), which causes them to be at high risk of aspiration pneumonia, resulting in hospital admissions. These individuals are advised against alternative nutrition and hydration as this does not eliminate the risk of developing chest infections. The purpose of this study was to establish the impact on length of stay by having a protocol to guide eating and drinking despite aspiration risks (risk feeding). A risk-feeding protocol was developed and implemented in a hospital setting. The quality improvement methodology of Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) was employed to evaluate the impact of a protocol on the length of stay in patients with dementia and aspiration pneumonia. Annual audits (2016–2018) on the time taken from admission to when a route of nutrition was established were conducted, with adaptations made to the protocol. There was a reduction in nutrition planning times with each year. On closer evaluation of the data, improved nutrition planning times for this cohort impacted on a shorter length of stay. Having a model of care in place to guide feeding decisions in dementia coordinates care, as demonstrated in timely decision-making. For patients who are admitted with aspiration pneumonia and dementia, a decreased length of stay is evident.http://www.mdpi.com/2308-3417/3/4/65aspirationdysphagiarisk feedingdementia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dharinee Hansjee
spellingShingle Dharinee Hansjee
An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia
Geriatrics
aspiration
dysphagia
risk feeding
dementia
author_facet Dharinee Hansjee
author_sort Dharinee Hansjee
title An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia
title_short An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia
title_full An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia
title_fullStr An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia
title_full_unstemmed An Acute Model of Care to Guide Eating & Drinking Decisions in the Frail Elderly with Dementia and Dysphagia
title_sort acute model of care to guide eating & drinking decisions in the frail elderly with dementia and dysphagia
publisher MDPI AG
series Geriatrics
issn 2308-3417
publishDate 2018-10-01
description People with dementia frequently develop dysphagia (swallowing impairment), which causes them to be at high risk of aspiration pneumonia, resulting in hospital admissions. These individuals are advised against alternative nutrition and hydration as this does not eliminate the risk of developing chest infections. The purpose of this study was to establish the impact on length of stay by having a protocol to guide eating and drinking despite aspiration risks (risk feeding). A risk-feeding protocol was developed and implemented in a hospital setting. The quality improvement methodology of Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) was employed to evaluate the impact of a protocol on the length of stay in patients with dementia and aspiration pneumonia. Annual audits (2016–2018) on the time taken from admission to when a route of nutrition was established were conducted, with adaptations made to the protocol. There was a reduction in nutrition planning times with each year. On closer evaluation of the data, improved nutrition planning times for this cohort impacted on a shorter length of stay. Having a model of care in place to guide feeding decisions in dementia coordinates care, as demonstrated in timely decision-making. For patients who are admitted with aspiration pneumonia and dementia, a decreased length of stay is evident.
topic aspiration
dysphagia
risk feeding
dementia
url http://www.mdpi.com/2308-3417/3/4/65
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