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Patient, parent and professional perception of the use of maintenance enteral nutrition in Paediatric Crohn's Disease

Patient, parent and professional perception of the use of maintenance enteral nutrition in Paediatric Crohn's Disease
Patient, parent and professional perception of the use of maintenance enteral nutrition in Paediatric Crohn's Disease
Aim: Maintenance enteral nutrition (MEN) is routinely used in Paediatric Crohn's Disease (CD) to prolong remission although there is limited evidence for efficacy and a lack of formal guidelines. This study surveyed patients’, parents’ and professional experience with MEN. Methods: Two questionnaires were developed to survey the experience of MEN; (i) Patients/Parents (children >10 years of age aimed to complete independently) and (ii) Dietitians. Questionnaires were sent to families prescribed MEN after exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) between 2015‐17 (n = 77) and dietitians working in paediatric regional centres in UK (n = 23). Results: Response rate to the questionnaires was 53% patients, 62% parents and 83% dietitians. Patients/parents reported medical/dietetic advice to be the primary factor affecting compliance, 30% patients reported side effects. Fifty‐six per cent of patients/58% parents stated a preference for dietary advice rather than MEN. Dietetic responses indicated 79% used MEN after EEN as standard procedure and 79% did not have exit criteria for MEN. Sixty‐eight per cent perceived the taste was the primary factor affecting patient compliance. Conclusion: Patients’ perception of the usefulness of MEN differs to professionals. This study highlights the extensive practice of MEN after EEN in clinical remission, which may not be nutritionally indicated. Patient preference is for dietary advice rather than MEN.
0803-5253
2199-2206
Gavin, J.
3da35b78-f57c-469f-a463-882a73477524
Marino, L.V.
c479400f-9424-4879-9ca6-d81e6351de26
Ashton, J.J.
1c0bfa29-794c-4fd5-93e0-6769e6037d72
Beattie, R.M.
9a66af0b-f81c-485c-b01d-519403f0038a
Gavin, J.
3da35b78-f57c-469f-a463-882a73477524
Marino, L.V.
c479400f-9424-4879-9ca6-d81e6351de26
Ashton, J.J.
1c0bfa29-794c-4fd5-93e0-6769e6037d72
Beattie, R.M.
9a66af0b-f81c-485c-b01d-519403f0038a

Gavin, J., Marino, L.V., Ashton, J.J. and Beattie, R.M. (2018) Patient, parent and professional perception of the use of maintenance enteral nutrition in Paediatric Crohn's Disease. Acta Paediatrica, 107 (12), 2199-2206. (doi:10.1111/apa.14571).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aim: Maintenance enteral nutrition (MEN) is routinely used in Paediatric Crohn's Disease (CD) to prolong remission although there is limited evidence for efficacy and a lack of formal guidelines. This study surveyed patients’, parents’ and professional experience with MEN. Methods: Two questionnaires were developed to survey the experience of MEN; (i) Patients/Parents (children >10 years of age aimed to complete independently) and (ii) Dietitians. Questionnaires were sent to families prescribed MEN after exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) between 2015‐17 (n = 77) and dietitians working in paediatric regional centres in UK (n = 23). Results: Response rate to the questionnaires was 53% patients, 62% parents and 83% dietitians. Patients/parents reported medical/dietetic advice to be the primary factor affecting compliance, 30% patients reported side effects. Fifty‐six per cent of patients/58% parents stated a preference for dietary advice rather than MEN. Dietetic responses indicated 79% used MEN after EEN as standard procedure and 79% did not have exit criteria for MEN. Sixty‐eight per cent perceived the taste was the primary factor affecting patient compliance. Conclusion: Patients’ perception of the usefulness of MEN differs to professionals. This study highlights the extensive practice of MEN after EEN in clinical remission, which may not be nutritionally indicated. Patient preference is for dietary advice rather than MEN.

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Clean copy MEN survey - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 September 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 September 2018
Published date: 1 December 2018

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Local EPrints ID: 426761
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426761
ISSN: 0803-5253
PURE UUID: 3d5da922-80e8-4049-b687-62404b3aa47e

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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2018 17:33
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:05

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Contributors

Author: J. Gavin
Author: L.V. Marino
Author: J.J. Ashton
Author: R.M. Beattie

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