Energy accuracy of nutritional fluids provided in hospital: comparing nutrition label values against direct bomb calorimetry.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS British Journal of Nutrition Pub Date : 2025-04-28 Epub Date: 2025-03-24 DOI:10.1017/S0007114525000601
Zane Hopper, Christopher Irwin, Shelley Roberts, Ben Desbrow
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Abstract

Mandatory thresholds for the accuracy of reported energy on food and beverage product labels do not exist in many countries. Accurate nutrition information is essential for ensuring nutritional adequacy among hospital patients. The aim of this study was to compare direct measures of energy of nutritional fluids provided in hospitals to values determined via manufacturers' specifications. Nutritional fluids were identified as any liquid provided to hospital patients orally, enterally or parenterally, to deliver nutrition. These were categorised into six groups aligned to food/medical standards, including (1) local recipes, (2) pre-packaged general fluids, (3) supplementary fluids, (4) prescribed nutrition fluids - thickened, (5) prescribed nutrition fluids - oral/enteral and (6) prescribed medical nutrition - intravenous (IV) and parenteral. An equivalence testing statistical approach (±10 % thresholds) was used to compare energy values derived directly via bomb calorimetry against those obtained from manufacturer specifications. A total of sixty-nine fluids were measured. One-fifth (n 14) exhibited non-equivalent energy values, with the majority of these (n 11; 79 %) likely to contain less energy than that calculated from reported values. Almost all (34/35; 97 %) prescribed nutrition fluids (oral/enteral (20/20; 100 %), IV and parenteral (7/7; 100 %) and thickened fluid (7/8; 88 %) products were equivalent. In contrast, only 21/34 (62 %) non-prescribed fluids (local recipes (2/11; 18 %), supplementary fluids (4/5; 80 %) and pre-packaged general fluid (15/18; 83 %) products) demonstrated equivalence. Energy content of nutritional fluids prescribed to hospital patients typically aligns with manufacturers' values. Consumption of non-prescribed fluids may result in lower energy intakes than expected.

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医院营养液的能量准确性:营养标签值与直接弹量热法的比较。
许多国家对食品和饮料产品标签上报告的能量的准确性没有强制性的阈值。准确的营养信息对于确保住院患者的营养充足至关重要。本研究的目的是比较医院提供的营养液体的能量直接测量值与通过制造商规格确定的值。营养液被定义为提供给医院病人的任何液体,用于口服、肠内或肠外输送营养。根据食品/医疗标准将这些食品分为六组,包括:1)当地配方,2)预包装的普通液体,3)补充液体,4)处方营养液体-加厚,5)处方营养液体-口服/肠内,以及6)处方医疗营养-静脉注射和肠外。采用等效检验统计方法(±10%阈值)将通过弹量热法直接获得的能量值与从制造商规范中获得的能量值进行比较。总共测量了69种液体。五分之一(n=14)表现出非等效能值,其中大多数(n=11;79%)所含的卡路里可能比从报告值计算出来的要少。几乎所有(34/35;97%)处方营养液(口服/肠内(20/20);100%),静脉注射和静脉注射(7/7;100%)和增稠液(7/8;88%)产品等效。相比之下,只有21/34(62%)的非处方液体(当地食谱(2/11;18%),补充液体(4/5;80%)和预包装的普通液体(15/18;83%)产品)证明等效性。给医院病人开的营养液的能量含量通常与制造商的价值一致。摄入非处方液体可能导致能量摄入低于预期。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Nutrition
British Journal of Nutrition 医学-营养学
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
5.60%
发文量
740
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: British Journal of Nutrition is a leading international peer-reviewed journal covering research on human and clinical nutrition, animal nutrition and basic science as applied to nutrition. The Journal recognises the multidisciplinary nature of nutritional science and includes material from all of the specialities involved in nutrition research, including molecular and cell biology and nutritional genomics.
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