“Eat Enough”—A nurse‐led intervention to enhance hospitalized older adults’ protein and energy nutrition

Author:

Brunner Silvia1ORCID,Müller‐Staub Maria2ORCID,Mayer Hanna3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing Science University of Vienna Wien Austria

2. Professor Pflege PBS (Nursing Projects, Consulting, Research), Wil, Switzerland Wil Switzerland

3. University Professor Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, Department of General Health Studies, Division Nursing Science with Focus on Person‐Centred Care Research Krems an der Donau Austria

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo develop an intervention enhancing hospitalized older adults’ nutrition.MethodsFor the first time, a mixed‐methods design with data triangulation was applied according to the six‐step model of Corry et al. to elaborate on a complex nursing intervention in the form of a logic model. Patients who were aged ≥80 years and hospitalized for at least 5 days were included. Sample size for quantitative practice analysis was 135 older adults, whereas 22 older inpatients participated in interviews and observations for needs analysis and generated data for key principles.FindingsThe intervention “Eat Enough” encompasses nursing team culture and comprises six actionable targets to deliver needs‐based support and reach required protein and energy intake for hospitalized older adults by sensitizing nurses and the interprofessional team. Facilitating nutritional intake would be supported by an advanced practice nurse who considers the medical and nursing care plan and therapy.ConclusionsThe intervention “Eat Enough” demonstrates that nurses play a key role in interprofessional teams to enhance older adults’ nutrition in hospital. The pipeline model displays how the actionable targets can be achieved, and how awareness raising can influence the context—leading to raised calories and protein requirement coverages and shorter length of stay.Implications for clinical practiceBy identifying risk factors of malnutrition and strengthening nurses’ responsibilities, the intervention “Eat Enough” could significantly enhance nutrition among hospitalized older adults. However, the logic model should be tested and implemented in future research.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Fundamentals and skills,Research and Theory

Reference61 articles.

1. Bakerjian D.(2022).Hospital care and older adults.Merck & Co.Retrieved April 12 2023 fromhttps://www.msdmanuals.com/professional/geriatrics/providing‐care‐to‐older‐adults/hospital‐care‐and‐older‐adults#

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