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Nutrition as a Vital Sign: Progress Since the 1990 Multidisciplinary Nutrition Screening Initiative and Opportunities for Nursing

Abstract

Kelsey Watson, Marie Farrell, Mary Beth Arensberg and Johanna Dwyer

Vital signs provide critical information about health and help form the baseline for clinical care. Twenty years ago, the Nutrition Screening Initiative posed nutrition screening as a vital sign for older Americans but this has still not occurred. Nursing is on the frontline for monitoring as well as working to improve nutrition intake in collaboration with dietitians and other healthcare professionals. This article describes the importance of malnutrition screening, key indicators of elder well-being, and how the older American population has changed in the last few decades. The article also chronicles the multidisciplinary Nutrition Screening Initiative, its accomplishments, challenges, and new developments including new screening data collection instruments and the frailty index. Other developments described are the Alliance to Advance Patient Nutrition's intervention framework and documentation of the economic value of nutrition intervention. Opportunities and next steps for nurses to help malnutrition screening become a vital sign are identified. These include the need to make malnutrition screening and intervention part of the core training for nurses. In the hospital setting, the Joint Commission requires that all patients be screened for malnutrition within 24 hours, however malnutrition interventions are often lacking. Thus another opportunity is for malnutrition measurement and documentation to be developed as a summative measure and included as part of the standardized nursing language, with a specific section in the Electronic Health Record. Becoming part of national health goals, such as the Healthy People 2020 objectives, is an additional important step for the evolution of malnutrition screening as a vital sign as is integrating malnutrition screening and intervention into healthcare incentives, including the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, transitions of care, and community intervention. Finally, committing funding for malnutrition screening, such as through reauthorization of the Older Americans Act, and gaining key learning from international experiences are important.

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