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Barriers and facilitators to screening for malnutrition by community nurses: a qualitative study

Barriers and facilitators to screening for malnutrition by community nurses: a qualitative study
Barriers and facilitators to screening for malnutrition by community nurses: a qualitative study
Background
A substantial proportion of individuals who live in community settings in the UK experience malnutrition. Routine screening for malnutrition by healthcare practitioners has been recommended in many regions. The present study aimed to understand community nurses' perceptions of barriers and facilitators to undertaking nutritional screening.

Methods
A qualitative study was undertaken with a purposive sample of community nurses working in one UK healthcare organisation. Semi-structured interviews were used to elicit perceptions of barriers and facilitators. Interviews were digitally recorded, anonymised and transcribed. Initial codes were assigned for salient constructs identified in the transcripts, refined by grouping, and a thematic list was developed.

Results
Twenty district nurses and community matrons were interviewed at which time saturation of the data was achieved. Six themes emerged: supportive organisational culture, time and resource to screen and intervene, ease and acceptability of the screening tool, professional judgement as good as screening, the need for training and sharing good practice, and enhancing communication between care settings.

Conclusions
The findings of the present study suggest that screening is more likely to be completed where an organisation is perceived to have a clear expectation that it is undertaken and also demonstrates this through training and availability of resources. The need for a process or tool that nurses find easy to use and relevant to their practice area was highlighted. Further research should examine the effect of the use of a nutritional screening tool by community nurses on nutritional care planning and intervention.
barriers, facilitators, nursing practice, nutritional screening, qualitative study, screening tool
0952-3871
Green, S.M.
1075a760-2a75-443c-96c7-194d0d90ede8
James, E.P.
b7e90b5a-da45-4459-ae84-150adc07e988
Latter, S.
83f100a4-95ec-4f2e-99a5-186095de2f3b
Sutcliffe, M.
dab503f3-d30d-4a2e-afd5-001e77f8b1ac
Fader, M.J.
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Green, S.M.
1075a760-2a75-443c-96c7-194d0d90ede8
James, E.P.
b7e90b5a-da45-4459-ae84-150adc07e988
Latter, S.
83f100a4-95ec-4f2e-99a5-186095de2f3b
Sutcliffe, M.
dab503f3-d30d-4a2e-afd5-001e77f8b1ac
Fader, M.J.
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277

Green, S.M., James, E.P., Latter, S., Sutcliffe, M. and Fader, M.J. (2013) Barriers and facilitators to screening for malnutrition by community nurses: a qualitative study. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics. (doi:10.1111/jhn.12104).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
A substantial proportion of individuals who live in community settings in the UK experience malnutrition. Routine screening for malnutrition by healthcare practitioners has been recommended in many regions. The present study aimed to understand community nurses' perceptions of barriers and facilitators to undertaking nutritional screening.

Methods
A qualitative study was undertaken with a purposive sample of community nurses working in one UK healthcare organisation. Semi-structured interviews were used to elicit perceptions of barriers and facilitators. Interviews were digitally recorded, anonymised and transcribed. Initial codes were assigned for salient constructs identified in the transcripts, refined by grouping, and a thematic list was developed.

Results
Twenty district nurses and community matrons were interviewed at which time saturation of the data was achieved. Six themes emerged: supportive organisational culture, time and resource to screen and intervene, ease and acceptability of the screening tool, professional judgement as good as screening, the need for training and sharing good practice, and enhancing communication between care settings.

Conclusions
The findings of the present study suggest that screening is more likely to be completed where an organisation is perceived to have a clear expectation that it is undertaken and also demonstrates this through training and availability of resources. The need for a process or tool that nurses find easy to use and relevant to their practice area was highlighted. Further research should examine the effect of the use of a nutritional screening tool by community nurses on nutritional care planning and intervention.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 19 April 2013
Keywords: barriers, facilitators, nursing practice, nutritional screening, qualitative study, screening tool
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 349432
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/349432
ISSN: 0952-3871
PURE UUID: 6e1d1686-1450-497e-b6b4-a5a0ce29ea8b
ORCID for S.M. Green: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1760-3679
ORCID for E.P. James: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9355-0295
ORCID for S. Latter: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0973-0512

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2013 11:01
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:06

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Contributors

Author: S.M. Green ORCID iD
Author: E.P. James ORCID iD
Author: S. Latter ORCID iD
Author: M. Sutcliffe
Author: M.J. Fader

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