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Improving nutrition to support healthy ageing. What are the opportunities for intervention?

Improving nutrition to support healthy ageing. What are the opportunities for intervention?
Improving nutrition to support healthy ageing. What are the opportunities for intervention?
Alongside declining activity levels, energy needs fall in older age and eating less is expected. However, as total food consumption declines, intakes of many nutrients are also likely to fall; while energy requirements may be met, other nutrient needs may not. Although this highlights the importance of nutrient-dense foods and overall diet quality in older age to ensure nutrient intakes are sufficient, maintaining or increasing diet quality may be difficult at a time when food access and preparation are becoming more challenging, and diets may be more monotonous. Poor nutrition, even in developed settings, is common. Older malnourished adults are more likely to have poorer health outcomes, longer hospital stays and increased mortality. Thus, apart from the evident personal costs, the economic burden of disease-related malnutrition is significant, and effective preventive strategies to promote good nutrition among older populations are needed. In particular, there is a need for wider recognition of malnutrition risk among older adults, including implementation of routine screening of nutritional status and early diagnosis. Design of future interventions to support older community-dwelling adults requires a clear understanding of the personal and contextual influences that affect patterns of food choice and consumption, including consideration of the importance of social and psychological factors. In addition, there are opportunities to intervene earlier in the lifecourse; the most effective preventive efforts to promote good nutrition in older age may need to start ahead of age-related changes in physiology and function, including younger adulthood and at the retirement transition.
0029-6651
257-264
Robinson, Sian
ba591c98-4380-456a-be8a-c452f992b69b
Robinson, Sian
ba591c98-4380-456a-be8a-c452f992b69b

Robinson, Sian (2017) Improving nutrition to support healthy ageing. What are the opportunities for intervention? Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 77 (3), 257-264. (doi:10.1017/S0029665117004037).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Alongside declining activity levels, energy needs fall in older age and eating less is expected. However, as total food consumption declines, intakes of many nutrients are also likely to fall; while energy requirements may be met, other nutrient needs may not. Although this highlights the importance of nutrient-dense foods and overall diet quality in older age to ensure nutrient intakes are sufficient, maintaining or increasing diet quality may be difficult at a time when food access and preparation are becoming more challenging, and diets may be more monotonous. Poor nutrition, even in developed settings, is common. Older malnourished adults are more likely to have poorer health outcomes, longer hospital stays and increased mortality. Thus, apart from the evident personal costs, the economic burden of disease-related malnutrition is significant, and effective preventive strategies to promote good nutrition among older populations are needed. In particular, there is a need for wider recognition of malnutrition risk among older adults, including implementation of routine screening of nutritional status and early diagnosis. Design of future interventions to support older community-dwelling adults requires a clear understanding of the personal and contextual influences that affect patterns of food choice and consumption, including consideration of the importance of social and psychological factors. In addition, there are opportunities to intervene earlier in the lifecourse; the most effective preventive efforts to promote good nutrition in older age may need to start ahead of age-related changes in physiology and function, including younger adulthood and at the retirement transition.

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Review paper_accepted 28 sept 2017 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 September 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 November 2017

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Local EPrints ID: 414729
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414729
ISSN: 0029-6651
PURE UUID: 04a39dae-d96f-414f-a32f-8ac77f7ce708
ORCID for Sian Robinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1766-7269

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Date deposited: 09 Oct 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:47

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Author: Sian Robinson ORCID iD

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