Authors

  1. Siegel, Sharon RD, LD
  2. Fan, Linlin PhD
  3. Goldman, Amanda MS, RD, LD, FAND
  4. Higgins, Joseph MS, RD, LD
  5. Goates, Scott PhD, MBA
  6. Partridge, Jamie PhD, MBA

Abstract

Background: Despite its high prevalence, malnutrition in hospitalized patients often goes unrecognized and undertreated.

 

Local Problem: A hospital system sought to improve nutrition care by implementing a quality improvement initiative. Nurses screened patients upon admission using the Malnutrition Screening Tool and initiated oral nutrition supplements for patients at risk.

 

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 20 697 adult patients to determine whether early initiation of nutrition therapy had reduced hospital length of stay and 30-day readmission rates.

 

Results: We found the average time from hospital admission to oral nutrition supplement initiation was reduced by 20 hours (20.8%) after the quality improvement initiative was introduced (P < .01). Length of stay decreased 0.88 days (P < .05) more for patients at nutritional risk than patients not at nutritional risk; the probability of 30-day hospital readmission did not differ between groups.

 

Conclusion: These results highlight the importance of adequate nutrition screening, diagnosis, and treatment for hospitalized patients.