Prescribing of oral nutritional supplements in Primary Care: can guidelines supported by education improve prescribing practice?

Background and Aims: With increasing resources being spent on nutritional supplements, this study sought to evaluate the effect of introducing guidelines on prescribing of supplements, by auditing practice, prior to, and after the implementation of guidelines. Methods: Prescribing practice was evalu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical nutrition (Edinburgh, Scotland) Scotland), 2001-12, Vol.20 (6), p.511-515
Hauptverfasser: GALL, M.J., HARMER, J.E., WANSTALL, H.J.
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container_title Clinical nutrition (Edinburgh, Scotland)
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creator GALL, M.J.
HARMER, J.E.
WANSTALL, H.J.
description Background and Aims: With increasing resources being spent on nutritional supplements, this study sought to evaluate the effect of introducing guidelines on prescribing of supplements, by auditing practice, prior to, and after the implementation of guidelines. Methods: Prescribing practice was evaluated from patient interviews, and knowledge of health professionals examined from questionnaires from 50 GP practices. Training on the use of guidelines on prescribing supplements was implemented, incorporating a Nutritional Screening Tool and practical application of high-energy dietary advice, targeting GPs and Community Nurses. Results: Education to GPs and Community Nurses significantly reduced total prescribing by 15% and reduced the levels of inappropriate prescribing from 77% to 59% due to an improvement in monitoring of patients prescribed supplements. Although knowledge regarding high-energy dietary advice for nutritionally ‘at risk’ patients did improve as a result of the training, this was not demonstrated in practice. This lack of relevant dietary advice remained the main reason that inappropriate supplement prescriptions remained high. Conclusion: Education on guidelines incorporating a Nutritional Screening Tool has proved to be an effective method of achieving more appropriate prescribing of supplements, suggesting the need for ongoing training of health professionals in Primary Care.
doi_str_mv 10.1054/clnu.2001.0479
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subjects Aged
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
Biological and medical sciences
Clinical Competence
Community Health Nursing - education
Dietary Supplements - utilization
Drug Prescriptions - statistics & numerical data
education
Emergency and intensive care: metabolism and nutrition disorders. Enteral and parenteral nutrition
England
Female
guidelines
Humans
Intensive care medicine
Male
Mass Screening
Medical sciences
Nutrition Assessment
Nutritional Sciences - education
nutritional supplements
Patient Education as Topic
Physicians, Family - education
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Practice Patterns, Physicians
prescribing
Primary Care
Primary Health Care - standards
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Quality of Health Care
Surveys and Questionnaires
Teaching. Deontology. Ethics. Legislation
title Prescribing of oral nutritional supplements in Primary Care: can guidelines supported by education improve prescribing practice?
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