Abstract
Although disease-associated undernutrition is still an important problem in hospitalized children that is often underrecognized, follow-up studies evaluating post-discharge nutritional status of children with undernutrition are lacking. The aim of this multicentre prospective observational cohort study was to assess the rate of acute undernutrition (AU) and/or having a high nutritional risk (HR) in children on admission to seven secondary-care level Dutch hospitals and to evaluate the nutritional course of AU/HR group during admission and post-discharge. STRONGkids was used to indicate HR, and AU was based on anthropometric data (z-score < −2 for weight-for-age (WFA; <1 year) or weight-for-height (WFH; ≥1 year)). In total, 1985 patients were screened for AU/HR over a 12-month period. On admission, AU was present in 9.9% of screened children and 6.2% were classified as HR; 266 (13.4%) children comprised the AU/HR group (median age 2.4 years, median length of stay 3 days). In this group, further nutritional assessment by a dietitian during hospitalization occurred in 44% of children, whereas 38% received nutritional support. At follow-up 4–8 weeks post-discharge, 101 out of orginal 266 children in the AU/HR group (38%) had available paired anthropometric measurements to re-assess nutrition status. Significant improvement of WFA/WFH compared to admission (−2.48 vs. −1.51 SD; p < 0.001) and significant decline in AU rate from admission to outpatient followup (69.3% vs. 35.6%; p < 0.001) were shown. In conclusion, post-discharge nutritional status of children with undernutrition and/or high nutritional risk on admission to secondary-care level pediatric wards showed significant improvement, but about one-third remained undernourished. Findings warrant the need for a tailored post-discharge nutritional follow-up.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Hulst, J. M., van de Vorst, K., Olieman, J. F., Hendriks, D. M., Oudshoorn, J. H., Plötz, F. B., … Joosten, K. F. M. (2024). Prospective evaluation and follow-up of nutritional status of children hospitalized in secondary-care level hospitals: a multicentre study. Applied Physiology, Nutrition and Metabolism, 49(5), 680–686. https://doi.org/10.1139/apnm-2023-0188
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.