Aspiration, risk and risk feeding: A critique of the royal college of physicians guidance on care of people with eating and drinking difficulties

Author:

O’Keeffe Shaun T.1,Murray Aoife2,Leslie Paula3,Collins Lindsey4,Lazenby-Paterson Tracy5,McCurtin Arlene6,Mulkerrin Siofra7,Smith Alison8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geriatric Medicine, GalwayUniversity Hospitals, Galway, Ireland

2. School ofMedicine, National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland

3. Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists -Professional Advisor, Preston, United Kingdom

4. Centre for Applied Dementia Studies, Faculty ofHealth Studies, University of Bradford, Bradford, United Kingdom

5. NHS Lothian Community Learning Disability Service, Leith Community Treatment Centre, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

6. School of Allied Health, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland

7. Department of Speech andLanguage Therapy, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom

8. Pharmacy and Medicines Optimisation Team, HertsValleys Clinical Commissioning Group, Hemel Hempstead, UnitedKingdom

Abstract

The Royal College of Physicians has recently published guidance on supporting people with eating and drinking difficulties. Although much of the advice in the guidance is sensible and helpful, in this paper we argue that the recommendations regarding ‘risk feeding’ decisions are flawed. In particular, there is a failure to clearly identify the nature, frequency and severity of different risks. There is an undue emphasis on aspiration as a risk and as a potential cause of pneumonia, and the limited evidence base for many interventions to manage risk is not adequately acknowledged. There is an emphasis on multidisciplinary team decision making at the expense of individual professional responsibility. We conclude that this guidance regarding risk feeding supports an unduly defensive approach to oral intake and should not be adopted as a standard of medical practice.

Publisher

IOS Press

Reference38 articles.

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2. Complexity of clinical decision making: Consent, capacity, and ethics;Askren,;Seminars in Speech and Language,2019

3. Intrarater and interrater reliability for measurements in videofluoroscopy of swallowing;Baijens;European Journal of Radiology

4. Systematic review and evidence based recommendations on texture modified foods and thickened liquids for adults (above 17 years) with oropharyngeal dysphagia–An updated clinical guideline;Beck,;Clinical Nutrition,2018

5. Evaluation of the natural history of patients who aspirate;Bock,;Laryngoscope,2017

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