scholarly journals Assessment of the Nutrition Care Process in US Hospitals Using a Web-Based Tool Demonstrates the Need for Quality Improvement in Malnutrition Diagnosis and Discharge Care

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (11) ◽  
pp. e001297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina L Sherry ◽  
Abby C Sauer ◽  
Kathleen E Thrush
2019 ◽  
Vol 119 (9) ◽  
pp. A26
Author(s):  
V. Kinghorn ◽  
T. O’Sullivan ◽  
A. Vivanti ◽  
L. Costello ◽  
A. Devine

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 6-17
Author(s):  
Jennifer Brady

This paper invites readers to consider how the ideals, concepts, and language of nutrition justice may be incorporated into the everyday practice of clinical dietitians whose work is often carried out within large, conservative, primary care institutions. How might clinical dietitians address the nutritional injustices that bring people to their practice, when practitioners are constrained by the limits of current diagnostic language, as well as the exigencies of their workplaces. In the first part of this paper, I draw on Cadieux and Slocum’s work on food justice to develop a conceptual framework for nutrition justice. I assert that a justice-oriented understanding of nutrition redresses inequities built in to the biomedicalization of nutrition and health, and seeks to trouble by whom and how these are defined. In the second part of this paper, I draw on the conceptual framework of nutrition justice to develop a politicized language framework that articulates nutrition problems as the outcome of nutritional injustices rather than individuals’ deficits of knowledge, willingness to change, or available resources. This language framework serves as a counterpoint to the current and widely accepted clinical language tool, the Nutrition Care Process Terminology, that exemplifies biomedicalized understandings of nutrition and health. Together, I propose that the conceptual and language frameworks I develop in this paper work together to foster what Croom and Kortegast (2018) call “critical professional praxis” within dietetics.


2015 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 222-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela Vivanti ◽  
Maree Ferguson ◽  
Jane Porter ◽  
Therese O'Sullivan ◽  
Julie Hulcombe

2021 ◽  
Vol 121 (9) ◽  
pp. A61
Author(s):  
S. Saeki ◽  
E. Rabito ◽  
M. Madalozzo Schieferdecker ◽  
M. Nascimento ◽  
A. Vavruk ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Imelda Angeles-Agdeppa ◽  
Frances Pola Santos Arias ◽  
James Andrei Justin Pascual Sy ◽  
Ren Annaliz Pabustan Garingo

: Addiction affects the economy of countries worldwide. Nutrition plays an important role in helping persons who use drugs (PWUDs) to regain their physical and mental health, thereby increasing the probability of recovery. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of implementing the nutrition care process on PWUDs management 120 days after its implementation. Following a quasi-experimental design with pre and post-test evaluations, 268 PWUDs admitted to 8 drug treatment, and rehabilitation centers in the Philippines were recruited. Developed nutrition management guidelines containing the nutrition care process and cycle menu of calculated diet for PWUDs were provided for implementation in the rehabilitation regimen. Body mass index was used to assess nutritional status, dietary diversity score (DDS) to measure diet quality, WHO quality of life-BREF to assess the quality of life (QoL), Kessler-10 Psychological Distress Scale to determine psychological distress, and Beck’s depression inventory to assess stress level. The results indicated a 92% reduction in underweight during the study period. Participants with high DDS significantly increased from 38.43 to 91.04%. All domains of the QoL were improved, the level of severe depression was significantly decreased (6.72 to 4.48%), and decrease in the proportion of participants experiencing moderate (18.3 to 12.7%) and severe psychological distress (4.48 to 3.73%) was observed. There was no significant association between DDS and the three psychological parameters. The implementation of the nutrition care process and the recovery diets is feasible and could improve the nutritional status, QoL, and stress level of PWUDs.


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