Barriers to nutritional care for the undernourished hospitalised elderly: perspectives of nurses
Journal article, Peer reviewed
© 2014 the authors. journal of clinical nursing published by john wiley & sons ltd this is an open access article under the terms of the creative commons attribution- non commercial license, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.

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Date
2014Metadata
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Original version
Eide, H. D., Halvorsen, K., & Almendingen, K. (2014). Barriers to nutritional care for the undernourished hospitalised elderly: perspectives of nurses. Journal of clinical nursing. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.12562Abstract
Aims and objectives
To identify what nurses experience as barriers to ensuring adequate nutritional care for the undernourished hospitalized elderly.
Background
Undernutrition occurs frequently among the hospitalised elderly and can result in a variety of negative consequences if not treated. Nevertheless, undernutrition is often unrecognised and undertreated. Nurses have a great responsibility for nutritional care, as this is part of the patient's basic needs. Exploring nurses' experiences of preventing and treating undernourishment among older patients in hospitals is therefore highly relevant.
Design
A focus group study was employed based on a hermeneutic phenomenological methodological approach.
Methods
Four focus group interviews with totally 16 nurses working in one large university hospital in Norway were conducted in spring 2012. The nurses were recruited from seven somatic wards, all with a high proportion of older (≥70 years) inpatients. The data were analysed in the three interpretative contexts: self-understanding, a critical common-sense understanding and a theoretical understanding.
Results
We identified five themes that reflect barriers the nurses experience in relation to ensuring adequate nutritional care for the undernourished elderly: loneliness in nutritional care, a need for competence in nutritional care, low flexibility in food service practices, system failure in nutritional care and nutritional care is being ignored.
Conclusions
The results imply that nutritional care at the university hospital has its limits within the hospital structure and organisation, but also regarding the nurses' competence. Moreover, the barriers revealed that the undernourished elderly are not identified and treated properly as stipulated in the recommendations in the national guidelines on the prevention and treatment of undernutrition.
Relevance to clinical practice
The barriers revealed in this study are valuable when considering improvements to nutritional care practices on hospital wards to enable undernourished older inpatients to be identified and treated properly.