330 likes | 505 Views
Nutrition Care for the Elderly. Proper Nutrition Is Important to the Health and Well Being of Nursing Home Residents. What is good nutrition?. Proper Nutrition is:. Enough intake of essential nutrients to maintain good health. Carbohydrates Fat Protein Water Vitamins Minerals.
E N D
Nutrition Care for the Elderly Proper Nutrition Is Important to the Health and Well Being of Nursing Home Residents.
Proper Nutrition is: • Enough intake of essential nutrients to maintain good health.
Carbohydrates Fat Protein Water Vitamins Minerals 6 Main Nutrients
Nutrients are needed for: Energy Preventing disease Maintaining a healthy body
Nutrition Care Alerts Program ! Improving the Nutritional Health of Your Residents
Nutrition Care Alerts ! • Designed to help maintain nutritional health of residents • Designed to help facilities address four areas of resident care
Four Common Nutrition Related Conditions • Unintended weight loss • Dehydration • Pressure ulcers • Complications of tube feeding
! Unintended Weight Loss Warning Signs • Needs help to eat or drink • Eats less than half of meals/snacks • Complains of mouth pain • Has dentures that don’t fit • Has a hard time chewing or swallowing
! Unintended Weight Loss Warning Signs • Has trouble using utensils • Is sad, has crying spells, or withdraws from others • Is confused, wanders, or paces • Has diabetes, COPD, cancer, HIV, or other chronic disease.
Action Steps Unintended Weight Loss(Poor Food Intake) • Alert RD/physician to poor food intake • Provide high-calorie liquids for medication administration, if indicated • Order weekly weights • Assess ability of resident to feed self
Action Steps Unintended Weight Loss(Poor Food Intake) • Recommend strategies to enhance self-feeding skill • Monitor feeding assistance provided for appropriateness
Action Steps Unintended Weight Loss(Oral Health Problems) • Examine oral cavity, evaluate swallowing ability • Alert physician/RD to poor oral health/dental or swallowing problems • Request dental consult, if indicated • Request speech/language pathologist consult, if indicated
Action Steps Unintended Weight Loss(Emotional or Cognitive Impairment) • Evaluate decline in mood/mental status • Alert physician to decline in mood/mental status • Report fever/infection to physician
Action Steps Unintended Weight Loss • RD/DTR Develop strategies to increase food intake • Pharmacist Assess impact of medications on appetite • Physician Adjust diet, as indicated
! Dehydration Warning Signs • Drinks less than 6 cups of liquid daily • Has dry mouth, cracked lips, sunken eyes, or urine is dark in color or has strong odor • Needs help to drink • Has trouble swallowing liquids • Has vomiting, diarrhea or fever • Is dizzy, easily confused, or tired
Action Steps Dehydration • Review vital signs • Assess hydration status • Alert physician/RD to deterioration in hydration status • Assess resident’s ability to drink unassisted and recommend strategies to enhance ability to drink unassisted • Monitor affects of strategies to increase oral fluid intake
Action Steps Dehydration • Suggest IV or oral hydration, if indicated • Monitor IV hydration; suggest changes in type, volume,or rate of administration, as indicated • Consider enteral tube feeding for rehydration • Evaluate for swallowing impairment, if indicated • Give medications with 6-8 ounces of liquid
Action Steps Dehydration • RD/DTR Recommend strategies to increase oral fluid intake • Pharmacist Assess continued need for diuretics, if prescribed • Physician Prescribe IV or PO hydration, if indicated
! Pressure Ulcers Warning Signs • Is subject to - incontinence - heavy perspiration • Needs help • moving arms,legs,or body • turning in bed - changing position when sitting
! Pressure Ulcers Warning Signs • Has lost weight • Eats less than half of meals and snacks served • Is dehydrated • Has discolored, torn, or swollen skin over bony areas
Action Steps Pressure Ulcers • Alert physician to tissue breakdown/wound development • Follow wound care protocol • Alert physician to resident decline in bowel and bladder function • Implement bowel/bladder training protocol, if indicated • Alert physician to resident inability to shift position adequately
Action Steps Pressure Ulcers • Restraints not recommended; if needed, check skin covered by restraints • Insert urinary catheter only as a last option • Follow “Unintended Weight Loss” and “Dehydration” interventions
Action Steps Pressure Ulcers • RD/DTR Develop nutrition plan for wound care • Pharmacist Assess impact of medication on resident ability to shift position/move body • Physician Examine resident’s skin; order wound care, if indicated
! Residents Who Are Tube Fed Warning Signs • Has nausea, vomiting or diarrhea • Has swollen stomach or stomach ache • Has constipation or cramping
! Residents Who Are Tube Fed Warning Signs • Has coughing, wheezing, wet breathing, or a feeling of something caught in the throat • At the site where the feeding tube enters the body there is • pain, redness, heat or swelling • crusty or oozing fluid
Action Steps Residents Who Are Tube Fed(Stomach/Abdominal Complaints) • Alert RD/physician to stomach/abdominal complaints • Assess complaints to rule out nonfeeding causes • Assess gastric residuals, recommend change in feeding tube end point, if indicated
Action Steps Residents Who Are Tube Fed(Stomach/Abdominal Complaints) • Flush feeding tube as needed to maintain prescribed rate of flow • Follow protocol for tube feeding hang time • Use liquid medications, if possible
Action Steps Residents Who Are Tube Fed(Site Complications) • Alert the physician to complaints regarding site of tube placement: - nasal placement: nose, ear, throat - percutaneous placement: ostomy site • Follow protocol for addressing tube site complications
Action Steps Tube Feeding • RD/DTR assess complaints to rule out nonfeeding causes • Pharmacist Rule out medication side effects/interactions as a source of complaints • Physician Rule out infection or mechanical source of complaints
Based on the Nutrition Care Alerts Adapted with permission by the Nutrition Screening Initiative, a project of the American Academy of Family Physicians, American Dietetic Association, and National Council on the Aging, Inc., and funded in part by a grant from Ross Products Division, Abbott Laboratories, Inc. These materials were developed by the National Policy and Resource Center on Nutrition and Aging at Florida International University through grants from the US Administration on Aging and US Health Care Financing Administration.