Affiliation:
1. Dietetics and Food Services Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Australia
2. Nutrition Research Collaborative Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Australia
3. Internal Medicine Research Unit Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Australia
4. Greater Brisbane Medical School University of Queensland Brisbane Australia
5. Centre for Health Services Research University of Queensland Brisbane Australia
Abstract
AbstractAimsHospital inpatients often eat poorly and report barriers related to mealtime care. This study aimed to measure and describe the mealtime environment and care practices across 16 acute wards in a tertiary hospital to identify opportunities for improvement.MethodsA prospective cross‐sectional audit was undertaken over a two‐month period in 2021. A structured audit tool was used at one breakfast, lunch and dinner on each ward to observe the mealtime environment (competing priorities, lighting, tray table clutter) and care practices (positioning, tray within reach, mealtime assistance). Data were analysed descriptively (%, count), with analyses by meal period and ward to identify variation in practices.ResultsA total of 892 observations were completed. Competing priorities (59%), poor lighting (43%) and cluttered tray tables (41%) were common. Mealtime assistance was required by 300 patients (33.6%; 5.9% eating assistance, 27.7% set‐up assistance) and was provided within 10 min for 203 (66.7%) patients. A total of 54 patients (18.0%) did not receive the required assistance. We observed 447 (50.2%) patients lying in bed at meal delivery, with 188 patients (21.1%) sitting in a chair. Competing priorities, poor lighting, poor patient positioning and delayed assistance were worse at breakfast. Mealtime environments and practices varied between wards.ConclusionThis audit demonstrates opportunities to improve mealtimes in our hospital. Variation between wards and meal periods suggest that improvements need to be tailored to the ward‐specific barriers and enablers. Dietitians are ideally placed to lead a collaborative approach alongside the wider multidisciplinary team to improve mealtime care and optimise intake.
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1 articles.
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