Transcript Document
NS 210 Unit 7 Seminar:
Assessment of the
Hospitalized Patient
Here we are at Unit 7!
How was everyone’s week?
Overview
Assessing the Hospitalized Patient
Purpose of Nutritional Screening
Nutritional Screening Process
Assessing Nutritional Risk
History
Dietary Information
Stature and Body Weight
Assessing the Nutritional Status of
the Hospitalized Patient
Assessing the status of hospitalized
patients involves 4 goals:
Identifying those at nutritional risk
Determining the severity and causes of
nutritional impairment
Deterring the patient’s risk of dying from the
undernutrition or developing a related
disease condition
Monitoring to evaluate response to nutrition
therapy
Nutrition Screening in the Hospital
Setting
30% of patients admitted to the hospital
are undernourished
A large part of these patients are
undernourished when admitted to the
hospital
A majority develop further nutritional
deficiencies during their stay
Clinical Nutrition (2003) 22(4): 415-421
Nutritional Screening
Purpose
Identify malnourished individuals at nutrition
risk
Should be done within the first 24-48 hours
Best done by a dietetic technician
Nutritional Screening Process
Definition
Process of identifying the characteristics known to be
associated with nutrition problems
Screening can be facilitated by signing a checklist
or form
Characteristics of the Screening process:
Being completed in any setting
Facilitates completion of early intervention
Includes the collection of relevant data
Facilitates completion of early intervention and
treatment
Determines the need for more in-depth nutrition
assessment
Components of Nutritional
Screening
Screening tools are designed to
Detect protein and energy malnutrition
And/or to predict whether malnutrition is likely to
develop/worsen under the present and future
conditions
4 main Principles for screening tools
1.
2.
3.
4.
What is the condition now?
Is the Condition stable?
Will the Condition get worse
Will the disease process accelerate nutritional
deterioration?
Assessing Nutritional Risk
Diagnosis and problems that can increase risk of
malnutrition include:
Trauma
Bowel resection
Short bowel syndrome
Small bowel obstruction
Hypoglycemic
Failure to thrive
Congenital heart disease
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Anorexia
Cancer
HIV/AIDS
Vomiting or Diarrhea
Anemic
Stroke
GI Bleeding
Nutritional Assessment
Using a variety of data to evaluate the patients
nutritional status including:
History
Dietary Information
Physical Examination
Knee Height
Estimating Stature
Midarm Circumference
Calf Circumference
Recumbent skinfold Measurements
Estimating Body Weight
History
Obtaining history is the first step in clinical
assessment of nutritional status
Data can be obtained from medical records
and from interviews with the patient
Parts of the medical record which are helpful
include:
Medical history, entries made by physicians,
nurses, social workers, medical records
Other essential components include facts
about past and current health, use of
medications, personal and household
information
Usual Body Weight
% UBW = Current weight in lbs / Usual
body weight
IBW or Reference Weight=
Males= 106#(for 5’0” and 6# for each inch
after that) example: 5’7 male= 148#
Women= 100# ( for 5’0” and 5# for each
inch after that) example: 5’3” = 115#
Calculations
%IBW = Current weight in pounds / IBW
in pounds
Assessment time!
Mario Martinez, was admitted to the hospital
with a new onset of vomiting for six days on
6/7/10. His past medical history includes:
Type II DM, Hypertension, and High
Cholesterol. He is 80 years old male (YOM)
and has not really eaten in 6 days due to
feeling full, nauseous, and started vomiting.
His height: 5’9” Weight: 175# Usually his
body weight is ~184#.. Serum albumin is
2.8. His diet order is NPO – Nothing by
Mouth
Assessment
Jeremy Stein was admitted on 8/10/09 with a
primary diagnosis of Shortness of
Breath(SOB). He has no past medical history.
He is 32 year old male (YOM). He is 5’10#
Weight: 341#. His UBW is 340. After speaking
with him, you find out his appetite is great and
he is eating 100% of his meals. His diet is
House and his serum albumin is 3.6.
Let’s figure out their Ideal body weight or
Reference weight!
Screening Exercise
Minimal Nutrition Risk
All other patients not identified at nutritional
risk.
Nutritional Risk (meets 1 of the following
criteria)
Clear liquid/NPO > 5 days
Current weight > 200% or < *80%
Recent weight loss of > 10 pounds in 1
month
Continued
Tubefeeding
TPN
>80 year old with score of 4 or more on
Nutrition Screnning Initiatives
Serum Albumin < 3.0
Transplant patients
Diet restriction < 20 grams protein
Dietary Information
Dietary information includes
Patients food preferences
Allergies and intolerances
Usual eating pattern
24 hour recall or simple food frequency
questionnaire can provide important data
on usual eating patterns and can help
generate additional questions on dietary
intake
Stature and Body Weight
Stature and body weight are important
measures to be obtained from hospitalized
patients
Under certain conditions they may have to
calculated using the following methods:
Patients knee height
Calf circumference
Age
Sex
Measuring body length in bed
Calf Circumference
Used to estimate body weight and as an
indicator of muscle and subcutaneous
adipose tissue
Energy Needs
Based on an individual’s 24-hour
expenditure
Determined by resting energy expenditure
Thermic effect of food
Energy expended in physical activity
Whether disease or injury is present
24-Hour Energy Expenditure
24 hour Energy Expenditure
Determined through indirect calorimetry
Involves measurement of body's oxygen
consumption
Carbon dioxide production
Uses a computerized metabolic monitor
In critically ill persons indirect calorimetry may
be preferable to estimating energy expenditure
Roughly approximated from a variety of
equations
What Increase 24-hour Energy
Expenditure?
What increases Expenditure
Surgery
Trauma
Infection
Burns
Various diseases
Increased Protein Catabolism
The degree and duration of increased
protein catabolism following injury vary
with the trauma’s severity
Protein catabolism may take several days to
peak before gradually returning to normal
Recommended protein intake can be based
on
Nitrogen balance
Body weight
Energy intake
Nutrition Screening Initiative
Nutrition Screening Initiative (NSI)
Begun to encourage routine nutritional screening
To better nutrition care in America’s health and
medical care settings
Goals
Raising public awareness of poor nutrition status
Developing assessment tools to identify potential
risk factors and major indicators of poor nutritional
status
Week 7 Project Portion
Calculate Following Height/Weight
Indices and discuss what the results
indicate about your patients
health(complete in unit 7)
Relative Weight
Weight/height ratio
Quetelet’s Index (BMI)
(Look in Chapter 6)!