Investigation of the Effectiveness and Efficiency of a Structural Clinical Nutrition Support
- Conditions
- Malnutrition
- Registration Number
- NCT02200874
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Hohenheim
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effectiveness and efficiency of a structural clinical nutrition support by an interdisciplinary Nutrition Support Team. To do this we examine nutritional management and its economic impact as well as the nutritional status of patients of University Hospital Tübingen before and after the implementation of a Nutritional Support Team.
- Detailed Description
In German hospitals disease related malnutrition is a major problem. Malnutrition is known to be associated with decreased quality of life, altered body composition as well as increased length of hospital stay. Guidelines recommend the installation of Nutrition Support Teams (NST) to combat this situation. However, the majority of German hospitals lacks a NST.
In the present study, we want to examine the effectiveness and efficiency of a Nutrition Support Team (NST) in an University hospital with 1500 beds. To do this we investigate the nutritional management, its economic impact and patient related data before and after NST-implementation. Examinations include a structural analysis of the hospital with regard to nutritional procedures and a patient-based analysis.
Patients are recruited from three representative normal wards and two intensive care units. Here we identify patients with risk for malnutrition with the help of nutritional screening tools (NRS 2002 \[Nutritional Risk Screening\]; NUTRIC \[Nutritional Risk in the critically ill\] Score).This is performed within the first three days after admittance. The patients with risk for malnutrition (NRS 2002 of 3 or more than 3, NUTRIC Score of 4 or more than 4) are included for further investigations. These include anthropometric measurements , assessment of body composition, evaluation of nosocomial infection and decubitus rate, quality of life (SF-12 questionnaire), length of hospital stay, evaluation of mortality risk, organ function and severity of illness as well as economic factors. Most examinations are repeated weekly depending from the length of stay in hospital.
All this examinations and evaluations will be collected at two time points. Before and after the implementation of a nutritional support team. That means we have two groups: group A- before NST-implementation (n=420) and group B - after NST-implementation (n=420).
After the whole data collection we want to compare the results of the two groups.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 840
- patient of University Hospital Tübingen
- patient of one of the study-wards: Gastroenterology, Otolaryngology, Visceral and transplantation surgery, Internal intensive care unit, Surgery intensive care unit
- written informed consent of the patient/advisor
- risk of malnutrition: NRS Score of 3 or more than 3, NUTRIC Score of 4 or more than 4
- age under 18 years
- withdrawn of written informed consent
- length of hospital stay shorter than 2 days
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method length of hospital stay Patients will be followed for the duration of hospital stay. Average hospital stay is about 7 days.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Score (points) of Nutritional risk Screening Every 7th day after admittance- until discharge. Average hospital stay is about 7 days. Patients on normal wards are screened with NRS 2002 (Nutritional Risk Screening 2002). Patients on intensive care units are screened with NUTRIC (Nutritional Risk in the critically ill) Score.
The screening is repeated weekly.case-related total costs of length of hospital stay At time of hospital discharge.Average hospital stay is about 7 days.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University Hospital of Tübingen
🇩🇪Tübingen, Germany