1 / 39

The Nutrition Care Process: Developing a Nutrition Care Plan

The Nutrition Care Process: Developing a Nutrition Care Plan. NFSC 370 - Clinical Nutrition McCafferty. Illness : any medical condition that alters nutrient needs; not necessarily a disease. Analyzing Assessment Data Study accumulated data Generate Nutrition Problem List

carolos
Télécharger la présentation

The Nutrition Care Process: Developing a Nutrition Care Plan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Nutrition Care Process: Developing a Nutrition Care Plan NFSC 370 - Clinical Nutrition McCafferty

  2. Illness: any medical condition that alters nutrient needs; not necessarily a disease. • Analyzing Assessment Data • Study accumulated data • Generate Nutrition Problem List • Nutrition Solutions

  3. Energy Needs Long’s Method: BEE x AF x IF • BEE = Harris-Benedict Equation Women: 655+ (9.6 x W) + (1.8 x H) - (4.7 x A) Men: 66.5 + (13.8 x W) + (5 x H) - (6.8 x A) • W = • H = • A =

  4. AF = Activity Factor Bedrest 1.2 Ambulatory 1.3 • IF = Injury Factor Minor Surgery 1.2 Skeletal Trauma 1.35 Major Sepsis 1.6 Severe Burns 2.1 (depends on %BSA burned)

  5. Practice Example: • Mrs. H is a 64 y/o female ht: 5’4”, wt: 146# • Admitted for minor surgery, after which she’ll be on temporary bed rest. Calculate her energy needs using Long’s method.

  6. Energy Needs Based on Body Weight Alone • 25-35 kcal/kg body wt or adjusted body wt. (maintenance) • 35-40 kcal/kg body wt or adjusted body wt. (anabolism) • Try this with Mrs. H (146 lbs.)

  7. Using Adjusted Weight for Obesity • If patient is >130% IBW • [(ABW - IBW) X0.25] +RBW = adjusted weight • ABW = • IBW = • 0.25 = • Controversial!!!!

  8. Example: Mrs. J. is 5’7” tall and weighs 185 pounds. She is lightly to moderately active. Calculate her protein needs. • Find her appropriate weight • Is her weight  appropriate weight >130%? • Use this adjusted weight to calculate protein needs:

  9. Other methods: • Enloe: • If pt. is <200% IBW, use IBW + 10% for adjusted weight • If pt. is >200% IBW, use IBW + 25% for adjusted wt. • OR, average of actual/ideal weights • OR actual wt if BMI < 40, IBW if BMI > 40 • OR 21 kcal/kg if obese

  10. Protein Needs • Basedon present nutr. status and stress level: Normal 0.5 - 0.8 g/kg/day Mild 0.8 - 1.0 g/kg/day Moderate 1.0 - 1.5 g/kg/day Severe 1.5 - 2.0 g/kg/day (critically ill)

  11. Nutrition Education Needs • Best way to present material • Oral, written, how much time do you have, etc. • Amount. of info pt. can handle • level of fear • literacy level • level if interest • level of control over own nutritional intake • … be flexible!! • Motivation to practice info…

  12. The Nutrition Care Plan Plan to meet nutrient and nutrition education needs (MNT) • Objectives • Content of counseling sessions • Time frame

  13. Example Problem: Goal: Plan/Intervention:

  14. Implementing Care Plan • Evaluating Care Plan

  15. Medical Nutrition Therapy • The provision of appropriate amounts of energy, protein, carbohydrate, fat, vitamins, minerals, trace elements, and water in whatever form best meets the client’s needs.

  16. The Diet Order • Physician’s written statement in the medical record of what diet a client should receive. • Physician writes the order • Dietary dept. receives order and provides regular or modified diet • R.D. suggests diet Rx or makes recommendations for changes if necessary.

  17. The Diet Manual • Contains all hospital’s diets • Describes the diet, rationale for use, foods allowed/ not allowed, nutritional adequacy and sample menu • Approved by hospital administration, physician, nursing, clinical dietitian • Different facilities have different diet manuals

  18. Routinely Ordered Diets • NPO - (nil per os) • Pt. is put on this diet prior to surgery or test so that nothing is in the GI tract

  19. Clear Liquid Diet- usually used day prior to and following surgery. • Transparent to light in color liquids… • E.g. • Mostly CHO, low prot, low fat = no residue left in GI tract • 600 - 900 kcals/day and 5-10g protein • Provides fluid/lytes to prevent dehydration • Should not be used for more than _____ days

  20. Full Liquid Diet • Used for pts unable to chew, swallow, or digest solid foods •  nutr. adequate than cl. liq., but low in niacin, folacin, and iron • All foods on clear diet allowed, plus milk and milk products: • e.g., cream soups, milk, cream of wheat, plain yogurt, pudding, custards, eggnog, ice cream, all juices, sherbet, coffee • ~1000-1500 kcals, ~45-50g protein, fiber free

  21. Dysphagia Diets • Further modifications in consistency for patients who have limited chewing or swallowing ability • See Appendix 55 pp. 1272-1277

  22. Soft Diet • More solid than liquid or puree diet but consists of food that is easily digested, bland, and low in fiber • Tender, soft meats (or mechanically ground),canned fruits (no raw fruits), well-cooked vegetables, white bread (no whole grains). • No gassy vegetables such as broccoli, cabbage, or cauliflower • Used for:

  23. Mechanical Soft Diet • Intended for pts w/ difficulty chewing

  24. Regular Diet Also called House Diet, General Diet, or Routine Diet. No restrictions.

  25. Other Terms • ADAT— • DAT – • DOC –

  26. Special Diets • Diets used in treatment of specific ds. states • We’ll discuss w/ each ds. state • e.g. low residue, diabetic, cardiac, renal.

  27. Test Diets • Fecal Fat Test Diet: provides a means of measuring fecal fat for the diagnosis of ____________________. • Glucose Tolerance Test (GTT) – used for diagnosis of diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance

  28. Increasing Patient Intake •  Frequency of feedings •  number and size of servings •  nutrient density: Add nutr supplements, e.g. Ensure, Boost • Encourage eating at mealtime • Have nurse (or other staff) set up meal tray and assist pt.

  29. The Medical Record • Medical record = legal document • Communication among members of health care team. • Confidentiality • POMR • Computer or black ink • Chronological order • Institution’s accepted abbreviations • Signature, date and time • Professionalism • Corrections/addendums

  30. Confidentiality Issues • Discussing current or former patients or any confidential information (except for the authorized professional exchange of info) • Information stored on computers • Documents with confidential info • Breach of confidentiality - penalties

  31. Writing a SOAP Note • Subjective • Information pt. or caregiver/family tells you, what you observe but haven’t measured. • Significant nutritional history • Appetite, home diet practices, chewing and swallowing ability, N/V/D, etc. • Pertinent socioeconomic, cultural info • Level of physical activity

  32. Objective • Factual, reproducible observations (anthropometric and lab data) • Dx. And pertinent medical history • Age, gender, height, weight, %IBW, etc. • Desirable weight/weight goal • Labs (pertinent) • Diet order/nutrition support (current diet provides…) • Meds (pertinent) • Calculated nutrient needs (may also go under “A”

  33. Assessment • Your assessment of pt. nutritional status based on S & O data • If you make an assessment statement in “A,” the information has to be under “S” or “O.” Example: pt. w/mod. depleted visc. prot. stores per alb level (must be listed under ‘O’). • Do not repeat lab values in assessment (“alb. Of 3.0 indicates…” No-no)

  34. Evaluation of pertinent nutritional history • Assessment of labs • Assessment of patient’s comprehension and motivation, if appropriate • Assessment of the diet order and/or feeding modality • Anticipated problems and/or difficulties for patient compliance or adherence

  35. Plan • Diagnostic studies needed • Suggestions for gaining further pertinent data • MNT goals • Recommendations for nutrition care and nutrition education • Recommendations for other health care providers • Specific parameters you will monitor • Plan for follow-up (time frame)

  36. This is your plan to improve nutritional status or make recommendations to the doctor        examples:         1. Educate pt. on 1500 kcal diabetic diet         2. Provide Ensure w/meals TID         3. Recommend MVI q day         4. Provide food preferences (list specific changes) 5. Recommend increased TF rate to 75cc/hr. 6. Monitor ______ (labs) 7. Follow-up in 2 days

  37. Other documentation styles: • DAR – diagnosis, assessment, recommendations • PIE – problem, intervention, evaluation • PGIE – problem, goal, intervention, eval. • (content is the same regardless of recording style) • Others…

  38. JCAHO • What is it? • New guidelines for charting abbreviations See Handout: JCAHO Do Not Use List

More Related