Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00841412

Prevention of Weight Loss in Long Term Care Veterans

Prevention of Weight Loss in Long-Term Care Veterans

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
222 (actual)
Sponsor
US Department of Veterans Affairs · Federal
Sex
All
Age
65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Background: Numerous studies have shown that many LTC residents receive inadequate staff assistance with eating, which places them at risk for under-nutrition, dehydration and weight loss. Moreover, improvements in feeding assistance care have been shown to improve residents' daily food and fluid consumption and weight loss outcomes. Objectives: The purpose of this program evaluation project is to train indigenous LTC staff how to improve nutritional care within the constraints of existing staffing resources. Methods: A multiple baseline design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of the program in one federal and one state VA LTC facility. Research staff collected baseline measures related to nutritional care processes and resident outcomes. All LTC units in each of the two sites were divided into two groups for program implementation. The program was implemented with staff and residents on the units in the immediate intervention group; while, the delayed intervention group remained in usual care and continued to be monitored monthly for all care process and resident outcome measures. Status: This project ended 10/1/13. Five published papers resulted from this study.

Detailed description

Background: Numerous studies have shown that many long term care (LTC) residents receive inadequate staff assistance with eating, which places them at risk for under-nutrition, dehydration and weight loss. Moreover, improvements in feeding assistance care have been shown to improve residents' daily food and fluid consumption and weight loss outcomes. However, these improvements have only been achieved through the use of research staff as opposed to indigenous LTC staff due to staffing resource limitations that exist in most LTC facilities. The purpose of this program evaluation project is to train indigenous LTC staff how to improve nutritional care within the constraints of existing staffing resources. Objectives: The PI of this proposal has developed standardized assessment, monitoring and staffing needs projection tools that can be used by long-term care (LTC) providers to improve feeding assistance care delivery and unintentional weight loss outcomes. The primary objective of this project is to train indigenous LTC staff how to (1) identify residents in need of feeding assistance, (2) effectively monitor daily care delivery; and, (3) utilize existing, non-nursing staff for some mealtime tasks to improve care. Methods: A multiple baseline design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of the program in one federal and one state VA long-term care (LTC) facility. Research staff collected baseline measures related to organizational characteristics, including staffing, nutritional care processes and resident outcomes including oral food and fluid intake and weight status. All LTC units in each of the two sites were divided into two groups for program implementation purposes (for a total of 4 groups across the 2 sites) based on the proximity of a unit to other units, resident and staff characteristics. The program was implemented with staff and residents on the units in the first site/group; while, the second site/group remained in usual care and continued to be monitored monthly for all care process and resident outcome measures. Research staff trained LTC staff in the implementation of program protocols during a 12-week intervention period. Research staff then monitored LTC staff implementation of the program monthly following intervention to determine the sustainability of the program in the absence of research staff. All staff training and monitoring was repeated for the LTC units in groups three and four. The intent of this program evaluation study was to determine the effectiveness and cost of translating efficacious research protocols into care practice to improve the nutritional status of LTC veterans. Status: This study is officially complete.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALImmediate Intervention GroupUnit staff received weekly training and feedback for 12-weeks to improve daily nutritional care processes.
BEHAVIORALDelayed Intervention GroupResearch staff monitored this group under usual care conditions, then these units crossed over into intervention.

Timeline

Start date
2009-02-01
Primary completion
2011-10-01
Completion
2013-09-01
First posted
2009-02-11
Last updated
2015-04-27
Results posted
2014-11-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00841412. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.