‘Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool’ predicts mortality and length of hospital stay in acutely ill elderly
‘Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool’ predicts mortality and length of hospital stay in acutely ill elderly
Malnutrition and its impact on clinical outcome may be underestimated in hospitalised elderly as many screening procedures require measurements of weight and height that cannot often be undertaken in sick elderly patients. The 'Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool' ('MUST') has been developed to screen all adults, even if weight and/or height cannot be measured, enabling more complete information on malnutrition prevalence and its impact on clinical outcome to be obtained. In the present study, 150 consecutively admitted elderly patients (age 85 (sd 5·5) years) were recruited prospectively, screened with `MUST' and clinical outcome recorded. Although only 56?% of patients could be weighed, all (n 150) could be screened with 'MUST'; 58?% were at malnutrition risk and these individuals had greater mortality (in-hospital and post-discharge, P<0·01) and longer hospital stays (P=0·02) than those at low risk. Both 'MUST' categorisation and component scores (BMI, weight loss, acute disease) were significantly related to mortality (P<0·03). Those patients with no measured or recalled weight ('MUST' subjective criteria used) had a greater risk of malnutrition (P=0·01) and a poorer clinical outcome (P<0·002) than those who could be weighed and, within both groups, clinical outcome was worse in those at risk of malnutrition. The present study suggests that 'MUST' predicts clinical outcome in hospitalised elderly, in whom malnutrition is common (58?%). In those who cannot be weighed, a higher prevalence of malnutrition and associated poorer clinical outcome supports the importance of routine screening with a tool, like 'MUST', that can be used to screen all patients.
acute disease, adult, disease, elderly, height, malnutrition, mortality, prevalence, risk, weight, weight loss
325-330
Stratton, Rebecca J.
c6a5ead1-3387-42e7-8bea-5ac7d969d87b
King, Claire L
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Stroud, Mike A.
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Jackson, Alan A.
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Elia, Marinos
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February 2006
Stratton, Rebecca J.
c6a5ead1-3387-42e7-8bea-5ac7d969d87b
King, Claire L
93f1a547-02bd-4b8e-9d3d-cae710687669
Stroud, Mike A.
1665ae65-0898-4848-bf0d-baec8f2bb078
Jackson, Alan A.
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
Elia, Marinos
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Stratton, Rebecca J., King, Claire L, Stroud, Mike A., Jackson, Alan A. and Elia, Marinos
(2006)
‘Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool’ predicts mortality and length of hospital stay in acutely ill elderly.
British Journal of Nutrition, 95 (2), .
(doi:10.1079/BJN20051622).
Abstract
Malnutrition and its impact on clinical outcome may be underestimated in hospitalised elderly as many screening procedures require measurements of weight and height that cannot often be undertaken in sick elderly patients. The 'Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool' ('MUST') has been developed to screen all adults, even if weight and/or height cannot be measured, enabling more complete information on malnutrition prevalence and its impact on clinical outcome to be obtained. In the present study, 150 consecutively admitted elderly patients (age 85 (sd 5·5) years) were recruited prospectively, screened with `MUST' and clinical outcome recorded. Although only 56?% of patients could be weighed, all (n 150) could be screened with 'MUST'; 58?% were at malnutrition risk and these individuals had greater mortality (in-hospital and post-discharge, P<0·01) and longer hospital stays (P=0·02) than those at low risk. Both 'MUST' categorisation and component scores (BMI, weight loss, acute disease) were significantly related to mortality (P<0·03). Those patients with no measured or recalled weight ('MUST' subjective criteria used) had a greater risk of malnutrition (P=0·01) and a poorer clinical outcome (P<0·002) than those who could be weighed and, within both groups, clinical outcome was worse in those at risk of malnutrition. The present study suggests that 'MUST' predicts clinical outcome in hospitalised elderly, in whom malnutrition is common (58?%). In those who cannot be weighed, a higher prevalence of malnutrition and associated poorer clinical outcome supports the importance of routine screening with a tool, like 'MUST', that can be used to screen all patients.
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Published date: February 2006
Keywords:
acute disease, adult, disease, elderly, height, malnutrition, mortality, prevalence, risk, weight, weight loss
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Local EPrints ID: 44245
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/44245
ISSN: 0007-1145
PURE UUID: 713fcd2e-a4ba-4a87-9cf7-4308aa584da5
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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:01
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Author:
Rebecca J. Stratton
Author:
Claire L King
Author:
Mike A. Stroud
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