DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
ASSESSMENT
- Nursing staff assess all patients nutritionally on admission and weekly using malnutrition universal screening tool (MUST) e.g. https://www.bapen.org.uk/pdfs/must/must_full.pdf
- refer those with score ≥3 to ward dietitian
- Review regularly especially during a prolonged inpatient stay
- Details of assessment are in the nursing admission forms
MANAGEMENT
- Provision of food and water by mouth is mandatory basic care
- Some patients wish to eat but are unable to because of difficulty chewing, poor appetite, apathy and depression, or weakness
- offer appetising food of the correct consistency in an appropriate way
- People at the end of their lives often eat little
Consent
- Document in detail the decision-making process at the time it happens
- Obtain consent for any nutritional intervention or withdrawal
- see Consent guideline
ORAL SUPPLEMENTS
- For patients unable/unwilling to eat sufficiently
How
- Obtain advice from ward dietitian
- Review patient regularly
- individual requirements will vary with the changing clinical situation
TUBE FEEDING
- If patient not eating sufficiently, consider tube feeding
- nasogastric (NG) tube for short-term
- percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) for long-term
- If patient fails a swallowing assessment, consider a 2 week trial of NG tube feeding
- in end-stage dementia (e.g. when patient fully dependent for all activities of daily living), there is no evidence that artificial tube feeding is of benefit
- tube feeding does not prevent aspiration pneumonia
- Refer to pharmacist for advice on medication formulation, timing and doses via NG tube or PEG
REFEEDING SYNDROME
Refeeding risk
At risk | High risk | Extremely high risk | |
Little/no intake for >5 days |
Any one of the following:
|
≥2 of the following:
|
Both:
|
Action
- To start enteral feeding, refer to dietitian, or out-of-office hours use Trust emergency enteral feeding regimen
- Daily K+, PO43- and Mg2+ with replacement as indicated via enteral or IV route
Micronutrient supplementation required:
- Pabrinex IV one pair of ampoules once daily for first 3 days of feeding
PEG insertion
Indications
- Dysphagia
- neurological (e.g. stroke)
- mechanical (e.g. oesophageal cancer)
- To supplement inadequate intake where alternative measures have failed:
- cystic fibrosis
- reluctance to eat, only rarely an indication for artificial nutritional support. If in doubt, contact nutrition team
Contraindications
- Absolute
- imminent demise
- ascites
- oesophageal or gastric varices
- advanced dementia
- Relative
- gastric carcinoma
- gastric ulceration
- previous gastric surgery
- physical deformity (e.g. severe kyphoscoliosis)
- clotting disorder/anticoagulation therapy (ensure INR <1.5)
- severe behavioural problems
How
- Refer to clinical nutrition nurse specialists via Careflow
Post insertion
- Post-PEG care is detailed in guidelines from endoscopy
- If pain on feeding, prolonged or severe pain, fresh bleeding, external leakage of gastric contents, stop feeding/medication delivery immediately
- seek senior advice urgently regarding CT scan, contrast study/tubogram or surgical review
- Do not discharge patient unless they or their carers are competent in tube care
COMFORT FEEDING
- If no benefit likely from tube/PEG feeding, consider a trial of comfort feeding even if patient has failed a swallowing assessment
- offer appropriate food of the correct consistency
- discuss risks with patient and/or family/independent mental capacity advocate (IMCA)
- discuss with speech and language therapist and dietitian
INTRAVENOUS FEEDING
- Patients are likely to benefit from total parenteral nutrition (TPN) only if this is needed for at least 7-10 days
- the risks of shorter term feeding outweigh the benefits
- Refer to nutrition team via Ordercomms
Indications
- Non-functioning gastrointestinal tract (ileus, obstruction)
- High gut fistulae
- Chylous leaks
Monitoring
- For details on requirements, monitoring and complications of TPN, see Artificial nutritional support in Surgical guidelines
WITHDRAWING NUTRITION
- A professional carer has a duty to prolong life, but not inappropriately to prolong dying
- In ethical and legal terms, there is no difference between withdrawing and withholding artificial nutritional support
- Consider each patient on their own merits and obtain consent
Who
- Withhold tube feeding if it is futile
- e.g. advanced cancer, end-stage dementia
- Withdraw tube feeding if, after a trial of feeding (e.g. nasogastric tube after CVA), there is no recovery and little or no likelihood of recovery or meaningful quality of life
How
- After a decision to withhold/withdraw nutritional support, consider stopping artificial hydration
- If a patient is at risk of aspiration but can still take some food orally, consider 'feeding at risk' to patient's wishes
Last reviewed: 2024-05-01