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An analytic appraisal of nutrition screening tools supported by original data with particular reference to age

An analytic appraisal of nutrition screening tools supported by original data with particular reference to age
An analytic appraisal of nutrition screening tools supported by original data with particular reference to age
Objective

Controversies exist as to the suitability of various nutrition screening tools for various age groups, the incorporation of age and age-related criteria into some tools, and the procedures associated with tool selection.

Methods

Reviews of the literature and national and local datasets were used to identify the types of screening tools available for different age groups, the origins of age-related criteria, and the value of tool selection procedures based on predicting clinical outcomes.

Results

Nutrition screening can be undertaken in fetuses, children, and adults over narrow or wide age ranges, for diagnostic or prognostic purposes, with or without nutritional interventions. Certain tools can establish malnutrition risk without using any nutritional criteria, whereas others can do so only with nutritional criteria. The incorporation of age and age-specific body mass index criteria into adult screening tools can influence the prevalence and age distribution of malnutrition, but no justification is usually provided for their use. In several circumstances, age alone can predict mortality and length of hospital stay much better than screening tools. We identified various methodologic problems in nutrition screening tool selection.

Conclusions

A comparison of nutrition screening tools designed for different age groups and different purposes can be problematic. Age and screening tools incorporating risk factors that are non-modifiable or generally weakly modifiable by nutritional support (e.g., age, disease severity) may predict outcomes of disease, but they are not necessarily suitable for predicting outcomes of nutritional support. To contextualize the findings, a framework for screening tool selection is suggested that takes into account a matrix of needs.
nutrition screening, malnutrition, body mass index, malnutrition universal screening tool, subjective global assessment, mini nutritional assessment, nutritional risk screening–2002
0261-5614
477-494
Elia, M.
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Stratton, R.J.
c6a5ead1-3387-42e7-8bea-5ac7d969d87b
Elia, M.
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Stratton, R.J.
c6a5ead1-3387-42e7-8bea-5ac7d969d87b

Elia, M. and Stratton, R.J. (2012) An analytic appraisal of nutrition screening tools supported by original data with particular reference to age. Clinical Nutrition, 28 (5), 477-494. (doi:10.1016/j.nut.2011.11.009). (PMID:22386636)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective

Controversies exist as to the suitability of various nutrition screening tools for various age groups, the incorporation of age and age-related criteria into some tools, and the procedures associated with tool selection.

Methods

Reviews of the literature and national and local datasets were used to identify the types of screening tools available for different age groups, the origins of age-related criteria, and the value of tool selection procedures based on predicting clinical outcomes.

Results

Nutrition screening can be undertaken in fetuses, children, and adults over narrow or wide age ranges, for diagnostic or prognostic purposes, with or without nutritional interventions. Certain tools can establish malnutrition risk without using any nutritional criteria, whereas others can do so only with nutritional criteria. The incorporation of age and age-specific body mass index criteria into adult screening tools can influence the prevalence and age distribution of malnutrition, but no justification is usually provided for their use. In several circumstances, age alone can predict mortality and length of hospital stay much better than screening tools. We identified various methodologic problems in nutrition screening tool selection.

Conclusions

A comparison of nutrition screening tools designed for different age groups and different purposes can be problematic. Age and screening tools incorporating risk factors that are non-modifiable or generally weakly modifiable by nutritional support (e.g., age, disease severity) may predict outcomes of disease, but they are not necessarily suitable for predicting outcomes of nutritional support. To contextualize the findings, a framework for screening tool selection is suggested that takes into account a matrix of needs.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 5 March 2012
Published date: May 2012
Keywords: nutrition screening, malnutrition, body mass index, malnutrition universal screening tool, subjective global assessment, mini nutritional assessment, nutritional risk screening–2002
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 362504
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362504
ISSN: 0261-5614
PURE UUID: 76bfcce2-6dba-432a-933c-ceb05deecaa9

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 25 Feb 2014 16:18
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:08

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Contributors

Author: M. Elia
Author: R.J. Stratton

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