An exploration of the experiences and attitudes of healthcare professionals towards enteral tube feeding for adults living in the community following stroke

Author:

Eleftheriadis Konstantinos1ORCID,Madden Angela M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life and Medical Sciences, University of Hertfordshire and Therapies Department North Middlesex University Hospital Trust Hatfield, Hertfordshire UK

2. School of Life and Medical Sciences University of Hertfordshire Hatfield, Hertfordshire UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundGuidelines recommend enteral feeding via gastrostomy should be considered for adult survivors of stroke with dysphagia who cannot eat or drink sufficiently for >4 weeks. Many people continue long‐term tube‐feeding via this route in the community where healthcare professionals contribute to their care and nutritional management, although little is known about their experiences of or attitudes towards enteral feeding in this situation. The present study aimed to explore the experiences and attitudes of healthcare professionals working with this patient group.MethodsHealthcare professionals were invited to complete a questionnaire devised for the study which comprised closed and open questions about tube‐feeding including their patients' participation in feeding processes and mealtimes and how these might be improved. Responses to closed questions were analysed descriptively and free‐text responses analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsFifty‐seven participants met the inclusion criteria. They identified patients' quality of life (77% of respondents) and nutritional support (75%) as the most important aspects of tube‐feeding. Good communication and training with healthcare teams and carers were considered important. Their patients' participation in tube‐feed administration and mealtime involvement were described as variable and potentially beneficial, but both were related to patients' choice and health impairment. Blended tube‐feeding was considered an option by 89% provided practical and safety conditions were met.ConclusionsParticipants' experiences of and attitudes towards tube feeding in adults living with stroke in the community in the sample in the present study are varied and focussed on individual patients' needs, safety and professional standards.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference31 articles.

1. ESPEN guideline clinical nutrition in neurology

2. Swallowing dysfunction after acute stroke: the incidence, predictors and outcome;Londhe C;J Assoc Physicians India,2023

3. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).Nutrition support for adults: oral nutrition support enteral tube feeding and parenteral nutrition.CG 32. NICE;2017[cited 2023 Oct]. Available from:https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg32

4. Scottish Stroke Care Audit. National report of stroke services in Scottish hospitals.2013[cited 2023 Oct]. Available from:https://www.strokeaudit.scot.nhs.uk/Downloads/2013_National_Report.html

5. Royal College of Physicians. National clinical guideline for stroke.2016[cited 2023 Oct]. Available from:https://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/guidelines-policy/stroke-guidelines

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