Title: Dia 0
1 Practical aspects of implementing screening and
treatment of malnutrition in Dutch
hospitals Marian van Bokhorst de van der
Schueren PhD, RD, VU University Medical
Center Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2Dutch prevalence data
65
- Steady decrease in malnutrition prevalence rates,
still 14 / 15
Dutch Annual Measurement of Care Problems 2010
31. Dutch Malnutrition Steering Group (DMSG)
- DMSG A multidisciplinary steering group with
national key persons - professors, doctors, dietitians, policy advisors
and researchers on key positionsin relevant
medical and nutritional fields - Goal fighting malnutrition together with
- the Dutch Annual Measurement of Care Problems
(LPZ) - the Dutch Ministry of Health
- the Dutch Society for Clinical Nutrition and
Metabolism (NESPEN)
4Points of departure to convince policy makers
- Increase awareness best practices, examples of
malnutrition in hospitals - Malnutrition is expensive
- Screening and treatment of malnutrition can save
money - There are European white papers
5How did we convince the minister?
6Best practices
7Assortment
- protein and energy dens liquids (chocolate
milk,milkshake) - cake
- deserts
- little buns (ham, cheese)
- pancake
- (fish) salad
- cheese
8Show effectiveness and cost-effectiveness
- Effectiveness
- Changes in nutritional status
- Use of sip feeds and tube feeding
- Number of dietetic consultations
- Length of stay
- Costs
- SNAQ-cart
- Time involved in screening
- Extra work for diet assistent
- Extra work for dietitian
- Ratio costs / effects cost effectiveness
9Results
- Recognition of malnutrition rises from 50 to
80 - Earlier start of nutritional intervention (from
day 6 to day 2) - Decrease in Length of Stay of malnourished
patients - Cost effectiveness 76 euro to save one day of
hospital admission - (Costs for 1 day in a university hospital 476
EUR and for a general hospital 337 EUR)
10Shorten a patients journey
Symptoms Screening Assessment
?
Recovery
Nutritional Status
Intervention
Home Hospital Home
Time ?
11Screening as a mandatory quality indicator (
(Health Care Inspectorate)
- Screening and treatment mandatory in all health
care settings - Malnutrition is defined as one of the main health
care issues - Screening and optimal treatment of malnutrition
becomes part of the main policy goals of the
individual hospitals, nursing homes and home care
organizations. - Ongoing collection and feedback of malnutrition
data by the Dutch Health Care Inspectorate
12Multidisciplinary project teams with authority
- Top-down
- Agreement with the board of Directors.
- Multidisciplinary project team with the key
persons -
- Bottum-up
- Ward-level team of a nurse, dietitian and
physician
13Multidisciplinary teams
- Members and tasks
- Frequency of meetings
- Points to be discussed
- Responsibilities
- Communication and education plan
http//www.fightmalnutrition.eu/fileadmin/content/
fight_malnutrition/methodology/Multidisciplinary_p
roject_team_and_agenda.doc
14Training programs and workshops
- Training of the project leaders (nurses,
dietitians, managers) - 1. How to start with implementation of
malnutrition screening? (4 hours) - 2. Education in malnutrition screening and
treatment (1 day, 1,5-2 months after the start
meeting) - 3. Follow up and group session on patient and
implementation cases (4 hours, 3 months after
educational meeting, and 1 year after meeting) - Workshops with these aspects in one day
- Multidisciplinary screening and treatment
guideline
15Feedback and follow-up
- Refreshment
- Posters
- Exchange of best practices
- Award for the best performing hospital
- Learning from other disciplines
- Sharing ideas on the website
16Quality indicator on screening
- Hospital Indicators
- Screening of malnutrition
- 1a. Do you systematically screen nutritional
status of all adult patients on admission to
hospital? Yes/no - 1b. Do you use SNAQ (Short Nutritional
Assessment Questionnaire), MUST (Malnutrition
Universal Screening Tool), or another instrument
to screen patients nutritional status? Yes / No?
- 2. How many patients (percentage of total)
were screened on malnutrition at admission? - 3. What percentage of patients scored moderate
malnutrition? -
- 4. What percentage of patients scored severe
malnutrition?
17Daily practice in our own hospital
- Introduction of the SNAQ screening instrument to
the electronic nurses admission questionnaire - Pop-up screens with outcomes of SNAQ screening
- ICT application to management-database to be
able to present hospital data by the end of the
year
18SNAQ score (obligatory !)
other nutritional questions (voluntary)
19Goal Realisation
20Evaluation of the process learning by time.
- At
- 2 weeks
- 6 weeks
- 3 months
- 6 months
- 1 year
- yearly
21New admission n13392, screened 75
22Quality indicator, screeningBenchmark between
hospitals
Publication bij inspection of health
care, Newspapers Internet kiesbeter.nl
23Number of hospitals and patients in measurement
- Hospitals Patients
- 2007 N 77 N 310.000
- 2008 N 94 N 790.000
- 2009 N 96 N 880.000
- 2010 N 97 N 1.050.000
24Quality indicator 1 All patients should be
screened for malnutrition at admission 2010
72 of patients screened at admission
72
65
56
52
25Quality indicator, part 2
- Introduced in 2008
- Measurement of optimal treatment
- What is optimal treatment?
- No outcome parameters available at short notice
- Measure adequate intake instead? How much
protein, energy, by what day? How to measure
intake in all patients?
26Quality indicator on treatment
- Which percentage of malnourished patients reaches
optimal protein intake at the fourth day of
admission to hospital? - Protein 1,2 1,5 gram/per kg/day
27Ward responsibility
Referral (ICT application) for further assessment
and treatment
28Daily practice in our hospital daily overview of
patients admitted with SNAQ scores 3 and up
29Registration of intake on day four of admission
in the electronic patient chart
30(No Transcript)
31Quality indicator 2 malnourished patients should
meet their protein requirements on the 4th day
of admission2010 44 of malnourished patients
with adequate protein intake on day 4
44
41
39
32Quality indicator 2 malnourished patients should
meet their protein requirements on the 4th day
of admission
Mean of all 100 Dutch hospitals 44 of patients
reaches 1,2-1,5 g P/kg on the 4th day
gt60 optimal intake 11 hospitals
40-60 optimal intake 15 hospitals
lt40 optimal intake 46 hospitals
No data 27 hospitals
33- van Bokhorst de van der Schueren, Nutr Clin
Practice 2012 274-280 - Leistra, Clin Nutr 2011 484-489
34Were do we go from here?
- Outpatient screening for patients at risk
Pre-operative (2007)
Geriatrics (2010)
Oncology (2012)
35Evidence based validated tools and
cost-effectiveness research
36We have expanded our knowledge to outpatients,
nursing homes and the community
Nursing homes
Outpatients
Inpatients
Community
37(No Transcript)
38Home Care
- 2008-2012 implementation project
- Training of 125 home care organisations
- LESA
- Toolkit
39 40Risk profile of malnourished, community dwelling
elderly
1.Have you losst weight unintentionally? 68
2. Do you think your bodyweight is too low? 51
3. Have you eaten less than normal last month? 51
4. Do you experience GI problems? 30
5. Do you think you eat unhealthy? 13
6.Do you need help with shopping and cooking? 43
7. Do you suffer fatigue? 57
8. Do you suffer pain? 33
9. Do you feel sad or depressed? 19
41 Toolkit with free accessible materials in
format to be custom made and best practices
- Guidelines and fact sheets
- Free format to be custom made
- Presentation for nurses, managers, doctors, .
- Project plan
- Newsletter
- Patient
- information
- ..
- Treatment plans
- Best practices
- Literature
42(No Transcript)
43Training programs and workshops
- Training of the project leaders (nurses,
dietitians, managers) - 1. How to start with implementation of
malnutrition screening? (4 hours) - 2. Education in malnutrition screening and
treatment (1 day, 1,5-2 months after the start
meeting) - 3. Follow up and group session on patient and
implementation cases (4 hours, 3 months after
educational meeting, and 1 year after meeting) - Workshops with these aspects in one day
- Multidisciplinary screening and treatment
guideline
44Home Care
- 2008-2012 implementation project
- Training of 125 home care organisations
- LESA
- Toolkit
45 46Website www.stuurgroepondervoeding.nlwith
toolkits healthcare settings
47No need to learn Dutch!www.fightmalnutrition.eu
in progress
48Training programs and workshops
- Training of the project leaders (nurses,
dietitians, managers) - 1. How to start with implementation of
malnutrition screening? (4 hours) - 2. Education in malnutrition screening and
treatment (1 day, 1.5-2 months after the start
meeting) - 3. Follow up and group session on patient and
implementation cases (4 hours, 3 months after
educational meeting, and 1 year after meeting) - Workshops with these aspects in one day
- Multidisciplinary screening and treatment
guideline
49Welcome to share your documents toolkits!
Visit our site - in progress
- www.fightmalnutrition.eu
- info_at_fightmalnutrition.eu
50Spread the news!www.fightmalnutrition.eu
51Welcome in Amsterdam !M.vanbokhorst_at_vumc.nl