Chapter 017
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Williams' Basic Nutrition & Diet Therapy
Chapter 17
Nutrition Care
Copyright © 2013 Mosby, Inc., an imprint of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. 1
14th Edition
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Lesson 17.1: Individualized Care and the Health Care Team
Valid health care is centered on the patient and his or her individual needs.
Comprehensive health care is best provided by a team of health professionals and support staff.
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Introduction (p. 331)
Nutrition support Vital to successful treatment of disease Often is the primary therapy
Registered dietitian provides comprehensive nutrition care
Nurses also identify nutrition needs
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The Therapeutic Process (p. 331)
Health care setting Person-centered care Health care team
Physician and support staff Role of the nurse and clinical dietitian
• Dietitian develops, manages, evaluates nutrition therapy• Nurse develops, supports, carries out plan of care
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The Therapeutic Process (cont’d) (p. 332)
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Health Care Team (p. 332)
Nursing role Coordinator and advocate: nurse works as
advocate for patient nutrition Interpreter: explanations help reduce anxiety Teacher and counselor: reinforces dietitian’s work
with patient
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Lesson 17.2: The Care Process and Drug Interactions
A personalized health care plan, evaluation, and follow-up care guide actions to promote healing and health.
Drug-nutrient interactions can create significant medical complications.
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Phases of the Care Process(p. 334)
ADA: Nutrition Care Process for RDs Systematic problem-solving method with four
steps Nutrition assessment Diagnosis Intervention Monitoring and evaluation
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Nutrition Assessment (p. 334)
Nutrition assessment Family and medical history questionnaires Current status and goals Patient and family are primary sources
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Food and Nutrition-Related History (p. 335)
RD responsible for evaluating patient’s diet Guides for gathering a nutrition history Underreporting energy intake is common Physical activity logs
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Anthropometric Measurements (p. 335)
Height: fixed measuring stick against wall is preferred Weight and BMI: weight at consistent times Body composition: skinfold thickness, hydrostatic
weighing, bioelectrical impedance analysis, x-ray absorptiometry, BOD POD
Waist circumference: fat stored in waist raises risks
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Anthropometric Measurements (cont’d) (p. 338)
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Biochemical Data, Medical Tests, and Procedures (p. 339)
Plasma proteins Liver enzymes Blood urea nitrogen, serum electrolytes Urinary urea nitrogen excretion Creatinine height index Complete blood count Fasting glucose Total lymphocyte count
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Skeletal System Integrity(p. 339)
Skeletal system integrity: several tests for bone integrity, osteoporosis
Gastrointestinal function Resting metabolic rate: to determine total energy
needs
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Nutrition-Focused Physical Findings (p. 339)
Nutrition-focused physical findings: See Table 17-2
Client history Guided questioning Dietary supplements Socioeconomic status, religion, culture, etc. Psychological and emotional problems Evaluate the data collected
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Nutrition Diagnosis (p. 341)
Problem: data is analyzed and diagnostic category assigned
Etiology: cause or contributing risk factors identified Signs and symptoms: changes in patient’s health
status that indicate nutrition problem
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Case Study
Mary Anne is a 45-year-old female admitted to the hospital for unexplained weight loss. Her physician orders a regular house diet on admission. Mary Anne asks for the tray to be removed from her room.
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Case Study (cont’d)
As part of the interdisciplinary team, which member would most likely initiate the nutrition plan of care?
What process should guide the nutrition plan of care?
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Nutrition Intervention (p. 341)
Nutrition intervention: follows assessment and diagnosis Written care plan addresses personal and medical
needs Food and/or nutrient delivery
• Personalized: needs, disease, therapy affect food plan• Modes of feeding: total energy of diet, nutrient
modification, texture Enteral feedings when patient cannot consume
food orally
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Nutrition Education and Counseling (p. 343)
Nutrition education and counseling Patients with education more likely to be compliant Long-term lifestyle modifications
Coordination of nutrition care Dietitians, nurses, prescribing physicians,
pharmacist Family, friends, care providers
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Nutrition Monitoring and Evaluation (p. 343)
Measures progress toward patient goals Three components
Monitor progress Measure outcomes Evaluate outcomes
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Drug Interactions (p. 344)
Risks with polypharmacy, especially in elderly Must gather information about all drug use, including
OTC, prescription, alcohol, street drugs
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Drug-Food Interactions (p. 344)
High-fat meal High-fiber meal Grapefruit juice Warfarin and certain foods Medications that alter taste or smell sensations Medications that stimulate appetite
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Drug-Nutrient Interactions(p. 344)
Usually medications taken with OTC supplements Patients rarely report supplements to physicians
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Drug-Herb Interactions (cont’d) (p. 344)
Least well-defined category St. John’s wort interacts with many medication
groups Others include papaya extract, devil’s claw, Gingko
biloba, evening primrose, valerian, kelp, ginseng, ginger
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Case Study (cont’d)
Explain how the Nutrition Care Process provides a consistent structure and framework to provide individualized care for patients.
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