Title: Implementation of NICE guidelines and the Research questions
1Implementation of NICE guidelines and the
Research questions
- Susan Murray
- (National Collaborating Centre for Acute Care,
Royal College of Surgeons) - Centre for Public Health - NICE
2Today.
- Implementing the nutrition support guideline
- Consider the key priorities for improvement
- The 5 key research questions
- Potential for a national approach to conducting
research on nutrition support
3Nutrition support in adults
Launched February 2006
4Tools to assist implementation
- NICE short version summary of the
recommendations - Full version purchased via the NCC-AC
- Quick Reference guide
- Information for the public
- Implementation guidance
- Audit criteria
- Slide set
- Cost impact tool
5Implementation, Implementation
- NICE has only recently in the last year been
involved in developing guidance for
implementation - Why it was not NICEs original remit
- Why awareness that guidance on implementation
is needed
6Access the guideline online
- Quick reference guide a summary
www.nice.org.uk/CG032quickrefguide - NICE guideline all of the recommendations
www.nice.org.uk/CG032niceguideline - Full guideline all of the evidence and
rationale www.nice.org.uk/CG032fullguideline - Information for the public a plain English
version www.nice.org.uk/CG032publicinfo
7Access tools online
- Costing tools
- costing report
- costing template
- Audit criteria
- Implementation advice
- Available from www.nice.org.uk/cg032
8Who is involved or considering ways to implement
the guideline?
9Understanding why this guideline was proposed can
assist implementation
- Topics proposed public, clinicians
- Where there are known problems, variation in
practice - Proposals via the Department of Health
- Why this guideline
- - because it is well recognised that many
patients are malnourished - - debate about the efficiency of oral sip feeds
10Why should the guideline be implemented?
- NICE guidelines are based on the best available
evidence - The Department of Health asks NHS organisations
to work towards implementing guidelines - Compliance will be monitored by the Healthcare
Commission
11How was the guideline developed?
- 2 ½ years of development
- Multi disciplinary Guideline Development Group
(15) - Technical team (10)
- Stakeholders (100)
- Evidence searched screening, oral, enteral,
parenteral, dysphagia, monitoring, nutrition
support teams - Evidence searched All populations
12Making sense of the evidence
- Searched for RCTs
- Studies in pockets Intensive Care, Surgery
- Difficult to make recommendations for specific
populations e.g. orthopaedic, oncology - Many problems with the studies
- Heterogeneity
- Indications for intervention differed between
studies - Controls
- Starting times
- Routes of support
- Duration of support
- Outcome measures
13Making Recommendations
- 77 recommendations
- Definite evidence for 17 recommendations
- In the absence of evidence
- - informal consensus
- - formal consensus - screening
14Issues in Nutrition Support
WHO ?
WHEN ?
WHAT ?
HOW ?
15Focus of recommendations is on Nutritional
Status not setting.
- Guideline useful for patients in Hospital and the
Community
16Organisation of nutrition support
SCREEN
RECOGNISE
TREAT
ORAL
ENTERAL
PARENTERAL
MONITOR AND DOCUMENT
REVIEW
17Implementing the guideline
- 77 recommendations made but.
- 10 Key Priorities for Implementation
18The whole team makes it happen 4 of the Key
Priorities
- Healthcare professionals involved in patient care
should receive education and training on
nutrition support - All people who need nutrition support should
receive coordinated care from a multidisciplinary
team - Acute trusts should employ at least one
specialist nutrition support nurse - Hospital trusts should have a nutrition steering
committee working within the clinical governance
framework
19Screening
Where When
Hospital inpatients On admission and repeated weekly
Hospital outpatients First clinic appointment and when there is clinical concern
Care homes On admission and when there is clinical concern
General practice Initial registration, when there is clinical concern and opportunistically, e.g. flu jabs, long term condition clinics
- use a screening tool that includes BMI,
percentage unintentional weight loss and
consideration of the time over which nutrient
intake has been reduced or likelihood of future
impaired intake e.g. MUST
20Suggested actions
- Clearly identify who is responsible for screening
in all care settings including care homes - Ensure staff have access to and are using
appropriate screening and assessment tools - Ensure staff have access to appropriate equipment
in the hospital and community setting, e.g.
weighing scales that are regularly serviced
21Recognise who is malnourished
- Malnourished one or more of the following
- BMI of less than 18.5 kg/m²
- unintentional weight loss greater than 10
within the last 3-6 months - BMI of less than 20 kg/m² and unintentional
weight loss greater than 5 within the last 3-6
months
22Recognise who is at risk
- At risk of malnutrition one or more of the
following - eaten little or nothing for more than 5 days
and/or likely to eat little or nothing for the
next 5 days or longer - poor absorptive capacity, are catabolic and/or
have high nutrient losses and/or have increased
nutritional needs
23When and what to give
- Health Care professionals should consider using
oral, enteral or parenteral nutrition support
alone or in combination, for people who are
either malnourished or at risk of malnutrition,
as defined above. - Potential swallowing problems should be taken
into account
24For patients with Dysphagia dont forget the
guidance
- Dysphagia- a key issue in the remit for the
guideline - No studies found on the benefits of modifying
textures - Working party of Speech therapists agreed
recommendations - Focus- obvious and less obvious indicators of
dysphagia - Caution on use of modifying textures of food and
fluid
25Indicators of Dysphagia
- Obvious indicators
- Difficult, painful chewing/swallowing
- Regurgitation of undigested food
- Difficulty controlling food/fluid in mouth
- Drooling
- Hoarse voice
- Coughing or choking before, during or after
swallowing - Feeling of obstruction
- Less obvious indicators
- Change in respiration pattern
- Unexplained temperature spikes
- Wet voice quality
- Tongue fasciculation
- Heart burn
- Throat clearing
- Recurrent chest infections
- Atypical chest pain
26If the person has dysphagia
- Recognise co-morbidities that increase the risk
of dysphagia - People who present with any obvious or less
obvious indicators of dysphagia should be
referred to healthcare professionals with
relevant skills and training in the diagnosis,
assessment and management of swallowing disorders - People with dysphagia should be given a drug
review to ascertain if the current drug
formulation, route and timing of administration
remains appropriate and without contraindications
27- Dont be overwhelmed by the guideline?
28Why guidelines are not implemented?
- Dont know or forget about the guideline
- Dont agree with the recommendations
- Isolation professionals disagree with the
recommendations - Psychological the patients wont like it
- Limited resources time, money, skills
- Organisational issues barriers to change
- Some recommendations easy to implement and
require one person compared to others requiring a
team approach to bring about change
29Solutions
- Dont know or forget about the guideline
- Dont agree with the recommendations
- Isolation professionals disagree with the
recommendations - Psychological the patients wont like it
- Limited resources time, money, skills
- Organisational issues barriers to change
- Some recommendations easy to implement and
require one person compared to others requiring a
team approach to bring about change
- Promote raise awareness posters, talks
- Team approach steering group to decide on
strategies to improve clinician and patient
confidence and adherence
30What can dietitians do to assist implementation?
31Dietitians are some of the key people who could
assist implementation of the guideline?
- Awareness and understanding about the potential
number of patients who are malnourished or at
risk? - Concerned that variation in practice is not
effective - The guideline is a useful tool that can influence
practice and improve the delivery of nutrition
support - Dietitians have the knowledge and experience to
have a vital impact on education and developing
systems to improve the delivery of nutrition
support
32Suggested actions
- Identify an implementation group strategy
- Raise awareness of the guideline recommendations
and why it is needed among all staff directly
involved in patient care - Include nutrition support within induction
programmes - Identify staff training needs and provide
training using externally commissioned and
in-house programmes - Review service protocols and care pathways
- Audit current practice
33Research Recommendations
- Several research recommendations were proposed
- 5 were identified key research questions
- these were areas where the GDG had the greatest
difficulty to propose a recommendation due to the
paucity of evidence in that clinical area - and if research is conducted in these areas this
would potentially improve NICE guidance and
ultimately patient care in the future
34The 5 key research recommendations
- Education
- Screening
- Oral nutritional supplements
- Monitoring
- Enteral tube feeding
35The research recommendations
- Formal educational intervention for all health
care professionals v no formal education - Nutritional screening programme v no screening
programme - - in primary care,
- - care homes (dementia),
- - inpatients,
- - outpatients
- Which components of nutritional monitoring are
clinical and cost effective? -
-
36The research recommendations
- Oral nutritional supplements
- v dietary modification/food fortificatn
- v dietary modification/food fortification /-
dietary counselling - Enteral tube feeding v no enteral tube feeding
- in people with dementia and dysphagia
-
37Which ones would you be interested in being
involved with?
- Education
- Screening
- Oral nutritional supplements
- Monitoring
- Enteral tube feeding
38What would the study be like?
- Scenario Screening has never been done in an
outpatient setting - Outpatient Aim to screen patients attending out
patients on Mon, Tues and Thurs - What to do trained nurse or researcher
- Weight, height, history of food intake patient
reports reduction or improvement in appetite - Clearly define (measures)
39Outcomes for the research questions
- change in nutritional status
- hospital admissions, hospital duration
- GP visits
- complications
- survival
- quality of life
- cost effectiveness
40NICE and the key research questions
- NICE will consider the 5 key research questions
- Propose and lobby potential funders via the NHS
RD - NICE will also support and back
proposals/protocols for the research
recommendations and emphasise their importance
and the potential need to improve the evidence in
a guideline
41Research, money resources proving the case
- While considering a protocol for a research
question - Conduct an audit of the area of interest
(example to be inserted) - this will help raise the profile that the problem
probably continues and add to the case that
research is needed - Dont run off in enthusiasm and try to conduct a
study on your own - Do become involved in setting the agenda for
research there is a fundamental problem out
there. Poor infrastructure for delivering
nutrition support
42Proposals for setting up research
- national approach to study design several
centres agree on a well developed protocol for
study (BAPEN, PENG, BDA) - number of centres carry out studies increase
patient number - potentially quicker to produce evidence and
influence the update of the guideline - national coordinator
- focus on useful and meaningful outcomes
43How many will benefit from this guideline?
44Everyone has a part to play
- This guideline should
- help healthcare professionals recognise
malnourished patients and those at risk - guide healthcare professionals to choose the best
method of nutrition support - reduce the number of people with malnutrition
- Set the agenda for further research in nutrition
support