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The roles of the dietitian in an 18-week telephone and mobile application nutrition intervention for upper gastrointestinal cancer: a qualitative analysis.
Testa, S, Furness, K, Choi, T, Haines, T, Huggins, CE
Supportive care in cancer : official journal of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer. 2023;31(4):245
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Plain language summary
Patients with upper gastrointestinal (UGI) cancer (oesophagus, gastric, and pancreas) are vulnerable to malnutrition. Symptoms of the cancer and its treatment are barriers to usual eating patterns that contribute to unintentional weight loss. The aim of this study was to explore the patient-dietitian experience of an 18-week nutrition intervention (the TEND study) delivered using the telephone and a mobile application to people newly diagnosed with UGI cancer to elucidate the roles of the dietitian. This study was an analysis set within the TEND study (a three-arm randomised controlled trial exploring the impact of delivering an 18-week intensive nutrition intervention to patients newly diagnosed with UGI cancer). Participants were allocated to receive the intervention using either the telephone or a mobile application, myPace. Results showed that: - rapport can be built within the patient-dietitian relationship without face-to-face communication. - the roles of the dietitian were characterised by regular collaborative problem-solving to encourage empowerment, a reassuring care navigator (including anticipatory guidance), and rapport building via reliable psychosocial support. - that role limitations led to unmet needs as the dietitian was constrained by poorly managed cancer symptoms that negatively impacted oral intake and subsequently weight stability. Authors concluded that more research is needed to examine an advanced care role for dietitians in the management of nutrition impact symptoms.
Abstract
PURPOSE This study aimed to explore the patient-dietitian experience during an 18-week nutrition counselling intervention delivered using the telephone and a mobile application to people newly diagnosed with upper gastrointestinal (UGI) cancer to (1) elucidate the roles of the dietitian during intervention delivery and (2) explore unmet needs impacting nutritional intake. METHODS Qualitative case study methodology was followed, whereby the case was the 18-week nutrition counselling intervention. Dietary counselling conversations and post-intervention interviews were inductively coded from six case participants which included fifty-one telephone conversations (17 h), 244 written messages, and four interviews. Data were coded inductively, and themes constructed. The coding framework was subsequently applied to all post-study interviews (n = 20) to explore unmet needs. RESULTS Themes describing the roles of the dietitian were as follows: regular collaborative problem-solving to encourage empowerment, a reassuring care navigator including anticipatory guidance, and rapport building via psychosocial support. Psychosocial support included provision of empathy, reliable care provision, and delivery of positive perspective. Despite intensive counselling from the dietitian, nutrition impact symptom management was a core unmet need as it required intervention beyond the scope of practice for the dietitian. CONCLUSION Delivery of nutrition care via the telephone or an asynchronous mobile application to people with newly diagnosed UGI cancer required the dietitian to adopt a range of roles to influence nutritional intake: they empower people, act as care navigators, and provide psychosocial support. Limitations in dietitians' scope of practice identified unmet patient's needs in nutrition impact symptom management, which requires medication management. TRIAL REGISTRATION 27th January 2017 Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry (ACTRN12617000152325).
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Functional biochemical and nutrient indices in frail elderly people are partly affected by dietary supplements but not by exercise.
de Jong, N, Chin A Paw, MJ, de Groot, LC, de Graaf, C, Kok, FJ, van Staveren, WA
The Journal of nutrition. 1999;129(11):2028-36
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Plain language summary
Elderly people are at risk of nutritional deficiencies for a variety of reasons including reduced appetite, increased medication, and alterations in the absorption and metabolism of vitamins and minerals with age. The aim of this study was to measure the influence of exercise, and supplementing the diet with vitamins and minerals, on indicators of nutritional and health status in frail elderly people. A 17-week randomised controlled trial was carried out on 145 frail elderly people living in the community. Participants were given either; 1) food products enriched with vitamins D, E, thiamine, riboflavin, B6, folic acid, B12, calcium, magnesium, zinc, iron and iodine; 2) an exercise programme; 3) both enriched food products and exercise programme; or 4) food products that had not been enriched and a social programme (the control group). At the end of the study, significant improvements in the blood levels of vitamins B6, B12, C and D were detected in the groups receiving the enriched food products compared to the controls. There was no additional benefit to be gained from exercise. The improvement in nutritional status did not appear to influence several other biological indicators of health, perhaps because these indicators were already within normal levels at the start of the study. Despite this, the authors concluded that long-term supplementation may help to maintain optimal vitamin and mineral levels in elderly people, and therefore reduce the chance of this population developing health problems related to malnutrition.
Abstract
A decline in dietary intake due to inactivity and, consequently, development of a suboptimal nutritional status is a major problem in frail elderly people. However, benefits of micronutrient supplementation, all-round physical exercise or a combination of both on functional biochemical and hematologic indicators of nutritional and health status in frail elderly subjects have not been tested thoroughly. A 17-wk randomized controlled trial was performed in 145 free-living frail elderly people (43 men, 102 women, mean age, 78 +/- 5.7 y). Based on a 2 x 2 factorial design, subjects were assigned to one of the following: 1) nutrient-dense foods, 2) exercise, 3) both (1) and (2) or 4) a control group. Foods were enriched with micronutrients, frequently characterized as deficient [25-100% of the recommended daily allowance (RDA)] in elderly people. Exercises focused on skill training, including strength, endurance, coordination and flexibility. Dietary intake, blood vitamin levels and nutritional and health indicators, including (pre)albumin, ferritin, transferrin, C-reactive protein, hemoglobin and lymphocytes were measured. At baseline, 28% of the total population had an energy intake below 6.3 MJ, up to a maximum of 93% having vitamin intakes below two thirds of the Dutch RDA. Individual deficiencies in blood at baseline ranged from 3% for erythrocyte glutathione reductase-alpha to 39% for 25-hydroxy vitamin D and 42% for vitamin B-12. These were corrected after 17 wk in the two groups receiving the nutrient-dense foods, whereas no significant changes were observed in the control or exercise group. Biochemical and hematologic indicators at baseline were within the reference ranges (mean albumin, 46 g/L; prealbumin, 0.25 g/L; hemoglobin, 8.6 mmol/L) and were not affected by any of the interventions. The long-term protective effects of nutrient supplementation and exercise, by maintaining optimal nutrient levels and thereby reducing the initial chance of developing critical biochemical values, require further investigation. Other indicative functional variables for suboptimal nutritional status, in addition to those currently selected, should also be explored.