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Critical care nurse · Aug 2015
Case ReportsNew Guidelines for Assessment of Malnutrition in Adults: Obese Critically Ill Patients.
- Kasuen Mauldin and Colleen O'Leary-Kelley.
- Kasuen Mauldin is an assistant professor of nutrition, Department of Nutrition, Food Science, and Packaging, San Jose State University, San Jose, California.Colleen O'Leary-Kelley is a professor, Valley Foundation School of Nursing, and director of the clinical simulation laboratory, San Jose State University. kasuen.mauldin@sjsu.edu.
- Crit Care Nurse. 2015 Aug 1; 35 (4): 24-30.
AbstractRecently released recommendations for detection and documentation of malnutrition in adults in clinical practice define 3 types of malnutrition: starvation related, acute disease or injury related, and chronic disease related. The first 2 are more easily recognized, but the third may be more often unnoticed, particularly in obese patients. Critical care patients tend to be at high risk for malnutrition and thus require a thorough nutritional assessment. Compared with patients of earlier times, intensive care unit patients today tend to be older, have more complex medical and comorbid conditions, and often are obese. Missed or delayed detection of malnutrition in these patients may contribute to increases in hospital morbidity and longer hospital stays. Critical care nurses are in a prime position to screen patients at risk for malnutrition and to work with members of the interprofessional team in implementing nutritional intervention plans.©2015 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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