Completion of a Nutrition‐Focused Physical Exam with hospitalized adults and pediatric patients: Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study

Author:

Jimenez Elizabeth Yakes1234,Lamers‐Johnson Erin1ORCID,Long Julie M.1,Mordarski Beth A.5,Ma Xingya2,Steiber Alison1

Affiliation:

1. Research, International, and Scientific Affairs, Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Chicago Illinois USA

2. Department of Pediatrics University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center Albuquerque New Mexico USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center Albuquerque New Mexico USA

4. College of Population Health University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center Albuquerque New Mexico USA

5. Lifelong Learning and Engagement, Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNutrition‐Focused Physical Exam (NFPE) feasibility is not well‐studied. We describe registered dietitian nutritionist (RDN)–reported NFPE completion for hospitalized adult and pediatric patients overall and by assessment parameters.MethodsTrained RDNs systematically conducted NFPEs for hospitalized adult and pediatric patients during the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition Indicators to diagnose Malnutrition multisite cohort study (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03928548). RDNs reported their ability to evaluate assessment sites for subcutaneous fat and muscle loss, fluid accumulation, and micronutrient status and to complete handgrip strength (adults and children ≥6 years) and mid‐upper arm circumference measurements (children). RDNs noted if they could complete the full NFPE; if not, they noted challenges. We descriptively summarized results and used multilevel logistic regression models to examine relationships between patient characteristics and NFPE completion.ResultsRDNs from 39 adult and 29 pediatric US hospitals conducted NFPEs for 327 adults and 214 children aged 1 month to 17.9 years. RDNs reported completing the examination for 44% (n = 145) of adults and 15% (n = 33) of children. They successfully evaluated 25 of 27 and 19 of 26 unique NFPE components in >80% of adults and children, respectively. Common reasons the full NFPE was not completed were limited mobility in adults and patient refusal in children. RDNs had lower odds of completing NFPEs in adults with lower vs higher education levels or higher vs lower nutrition complexity and in younger vs older children.ConclusionRDNs evaluated NFPE components for a high proportion (>80%) of hospitalized patients.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference44 articles.

1. Nutrition-Focused Physical Examination in Pediatric Patients

2. World Health Organization. Malnutrition. Accessed March 10 2023.https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/malnutrition

3. Dutch national survey to test the STRONGkids nutritional risk screening tool in hospitalized children

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