Title of article :
Malnutrition in hospital outpatients and inpatients: prevalence, concurrent validity and ease of use of the malnutrition universal screening tool (MUST) for adults
Author/Authors :
Elia، Marinos نويسنده , , Stratton، Rebecca J. نويسنده , , Hackston، Annemarie نويسنده , , Longmore، David نويسنده , , Dixon، Rod نويسنده , , Price، Sarah نويسنده , , Stroud، Mike نويسنده , , King، Claire نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The ʹmalnutrition universal screening toolʹ (ʹMUSTʹ) for adults has been developed for all health care settings and patient groups, but ease of use and agreement with other published tools when screening to identify malnutrition requires investigation. The present study assessed the agreement and the prevalence of malnutrition risk between ʹMUSTʹ and a variety of other tools in the same patients and compared the ease of using these tools. Groups of patients were consecutively screened using ʹMUSTʹ and: (1) MEREC Bulletin (MEREC) and Hickson and Hill (HH) tools (fifty gastroenterology outpatients); (2) nutrition risk score (NRS) and malnutrition screening tool (MST; seventy-five medical inpatients); (3) short-form mini nutritional assessment (MNA-tool; eighty-six elderly and eighty-five surgical inpatients); (4) subjective global assessment (SGA; fifty medical inpatients); (5) Doyle undernutrition risk score (URS; fifty-two surgical inpatients). Using ʹMUSTʹ, the prevalence of malnutrition risk ranged from 19-60 % in inpatients and 30 % in outpatients. ʹMUSTʹ had ʹexcellentʹ agreement ((kappa) 0·775-0·893) with MEREC, NRS and SGA tools, ʹfair-goodʹ agreement ((kappa) 0·551-0·711) with HH, MST and MNA-tool tools and ʹpoorʹ agreement with the URS tool ((kappa) 0·255). When categorisation of malnutrition risk differed between tools, it did not do so systematically, except between ʹMUSTʹ and MNA-tool (P=0·0005) and URS (P=0·039). ʹMUSTʹ and MST were the easiest, quickest tools to complete (3-5 min). The present investigation suggested a high prevalence of malnutrition in hospital inpatients and outpatients (19-60 % with ʹMUSTʹ) and ʹfair-goodʹ to ʹexcellentʹ agreement beyond chance between ʹMUSTʹ and most other tools studied. ʹMUSTʹ was quick and easy to use in these patient groups.
Keywords :
Malnutrition , validity , screening , adults
Journal title :
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Journal title :
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION