1. Prospective evaluation and follow-up of nutritional status of children hospitalized in secondary-care level hospitals: a multicentre study.
- Author
-
Hulst, Jessie M., van de Vorst, Kelly, Olieman, Joanne F., Hendriks, Daniëlle M., Oudshoorn, Johanna H., Plötz, Frans B., Roskam, Mariëlle, van der Schoor, Sophie R.D., Tramper-Stranders, Gerdien A., Verhoeven, Jennifer J., van Wering, Herbert M., Winder, Eefje, and Joosten, Koen F.M.
- Subjects
RISK assessment ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) ,MALNUTRITION ,PATIENTS ,RESEARCH funding ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,NUTRITIONAL assessment ,HOSPITAL care ,HOSPITALS ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,DISCHARGE planning ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NUTRITIONAL status ,RESEARCH ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL care of children ,PATIENT aftercare ,DISEASE risk factors ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Although disease-associated undernutrition is still an important problem in hospitalized children that is often underrecognized, follow-up studies evaluating post-discharge nutritional status of children with undernutrition are lacking. The aim of this multicentre prospective observational cohort study was to assess the rate of acute undernutrition (AU) and/or having a high nutritional risk (HR) in children on admission to seven secondary-care level Dutch hospitals and to evaluate the nutritional course of AU/HR group during admission and post-discharge. STRONG
kids was used to indicate HR, and AU was based on anthropometric data (z-score < −2 for weight-for-age (WFA; <1 year) or weight-for-height (WFH; ≥1 year)). In total, 1985 patients were screened for AU/HR over a 12-month period. On admission, AU was present in 9.9% of screened children and 6.2% were classified as HR; 266 (13.4%) children comprised the AU/HR group (median age 2.4 years, median length of stay 3 days). In this group, further nutritional assessment by a dietitian during hospitalization occurred in 44% of children, whereas 38% received nutritional support. At follow-up 4–8 weeks post-discharge, 101 out of orginal 266 children in the AU/HR group (38%) had available paired anthropometric measurements to re-assess nutrition status. Significant improvement of WFA/WFH compared to admission (−2.48 vs. −1.51 SD; p < 0.001) and significant decline in AU rate from admission to outpatient follow-up (69.3% vs. 35.6%; p < 0.001) were shown. In conclusion, post-discharge nutritional status of children with undernutrition and/or high nutritional risk on admission to secondary-care level pediatric wards showed significant improvement, but about one-third remained undernourished. Findings warrant the need for a tailored post-discharge nutritional follow-up. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF