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ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Impact of Cognition and Handfeeding Assistance on Nutritional Intake for Nursing Home Residents

, PhD, RN-BC, FNP-BC, FGSA, FAAN, , PhD, RN, CNE, WCC, FAAN, , PhD, , MS, , PhD, RN, FAAN, , PhD, RN, CNS, CEN, CNE & , PhD, RN, WCC, CNE, FGSA, FAAN show all
Pages 262-276 | Published online: 24 May 2019
 

Abstract

In nursing homes (NHs), residents are at risk for malnutrition and weight loss. The purpose of this secondary data analysis was to examine the impact of resident cognitive status and level of feeding assistance provided by NH staff on resident’s daily nutritional intake and body weight. As part of a large, multisite clinical trial (N = 786), residents with and without dementia were examined according to level of feeding assistance required during mealtimes (independent, set-up only, needs help eating) over a 21-day period. Outcomes analyzed were percent of meal intake by meal type (breakfast, lunch, dinner) and overall daily intake (meals + snacks/supplements). Residents with dementia who required meal set-up assistance had significantly lower meal intake for all three meals. Residents without dementia requiring meal set-up assistance experienced significantly lower intake for breakfast and dinner, but not lunch. When snacks and supplements were offered between meals, residents with dementia consumed approximately 163 additional calories/day, and residents without dementia consumed approximately 156 additional calories/day. This study adds new evidence that residents at greatest risk for low intake are those who are only provided set-up assistance for meals and/or have cognitive impairment.

Additional information

Funding

First author supported by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Nurse Faculty Scholars program (2014-2017); original project sponsored by The National Institute of Health National Institute of Nursing Research (NCT00665535), the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long Term Care, and the Toronto Health Economic Technology Assessment collaborative; secondary data analysis supported by the UTHealth School of Nursing’s Theodore J. and Mary E. Trumble Endowment from the UTHealth-Houston, Cizek School of Nursing.

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