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1.
Eur J Clin Nutr ; 68(12): 1294-9, 2014 Dec.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25248359

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Parenteral nutrition (PN) should be provided to the malnourished patient if enteral feeding is insufficient or unsafe. A nutrition support team (NST) may improve PN services. We compared the use and complications of hospital PN before and after the implementation of an NST. SUBJECTS/METHODS: All inpatients referred for PN outside of the intensive care unit and the intestinal failure unit were prospectively included from 2009 to 2012. The NST was introduced in 2010. Quality improvement methodology was applied. RESULTS: In 2009, a mean of 16 (limits of normal variation 4-28) patients were referred for PN each month. After introduction of the NST, this rose to 26 (10-42) referrals per month. The percentage of referrals where PN was not initiated increased from 5.3% in 2009 to 10.1% in 2012 (P=0.03). This increase was restricted to teams that infrequently referred for PN, and enteral nutrition could replace PN in 31 of 51 patients (61%) as compared with 8 of 32 (25%) patients referred from teams that frequently referred for PN (P=0.001). The frequency of PN started owing to an insufficient oral or enteral intake decreased from 11% to 3% (P=0.01). The catheter-related bloodstream infection rate dropped from 6.7 to 0.7 episodes per 1000 catheter days (P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Introduction of an NST increased both the total PN use and the percentage of referrals where enteral nutrition could replace PN. Medical specialty influenced the referral pattern and the likelihood that a referral resulted in PN being initiated. Safety of PN catheters improved significantly following NST introduction.


Sujet(s)
Malnutrition/thérapie , Nutrition parentérale/méthodes , Sujet âgé , Loi du khi-deux , Humains , Malnutrition/mortalité , Adulte d'âge moyen , Nutrition parentérale/effets indésirables , Nutrition parentérale/normes , Études prospectives , Orientation vers un spécialiste , Sepsie/étiologie , Royaume-Uni
2.
Health Trends ; 22(3): 126-8, 1990.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10111527

RÉSUMÉ

New community-based preventive initiatives are required if a reduction in deliberate self-poisoning is to be achieved. Local epidemiological data can be used in a health education approach, directed at professionals who have the most contact with potential cases of deliberate self-poisoning and also to those people falling within identified high-risk groups. Such initiatives require defined outcome measures and a number are proposed. The implications for data collection on deliberate self-poisoning are discussed.


Sujet(s)
Intoxication/prévention et contrôle , Services de médecine préventive/organisation et administration , Comportement dangereux , Service hospitalier d'urgences/statistiques et données numériques , Angleterre/épidémiologie , Humains , Intoxication/épidémiologie
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