“争论的焦点……”:疗养院居民对食物偏好的感知障碍和情境依赖。

Q3 Medicine Journal of Nutrition in Gerontology and Geriatrics Pub Date : 2019-07-01 Epub Date: 2019-05-27 DOI:10.1080/21551197.2019.1617220
Chelsea N Goldstein, Katherine M Abbott, Lauren R Bangerter, Amy Kotterman, Kimberly Van Haitsma
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本研究从养老院(NH)居民的角度探讨了满足食物偏好的障碍,以及偏好改变的原因(情境依赖)。采访完成了255名居民在28个NHs大费城,宾夕法尼亚州使用六种食品的日常生活清单偏好- nh (PELI-NH)。参与者主要是白人(77%),女性(67.8%)和寡妇(44%),受过高中教育(48%)。内容分析确定了n = 386个障碍和n = 57个情境依赖性。参与者报告说,供应商的政策和工作人员的熟练程度是在吃什么、什么时候和在哪里吃的偏好实现的环境障碍。人们认为健康状况和个人资源是获取零食、外卖和外出就餐的障碍。情境依赖与居民的感知健康和家庭关系质量有关。结果对提供者在护理计划中集中食物偏好的实现,并使用食物偏好来解决用餐质量问题具有启示意义。
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"A Bone of Contention…": Perceived Barriers and Situational Dependencies to Food Preferences of Nursing Home Residents.

This study investigated barriers to fulfilling food preferences from nursing home (NH) residents' perspectives, and the reasons preferences changed (situational dependencies). Interviews were completed with 255 residents in 28 NHs across greater Philadelphia, PA using six food items from the Preferences for Everyday Living Inventory-NH (PELI-NH). Participants were predominantly white (77%), female (67.8%), and widowed (44%) with high school educations (48%). Content analysis was used to identify n = 386 barriers and n = 57 situational dependencies. Participants reported provider policies and staff proficiency as environmental barriers to preference fulfillment regarding what, when, and where to eat. Perceived health and personal resources were barriers to obtaining snacks, take-out, and dining out. Situational dependencies resulted from residents' perceived health and quality of family relationships. Results have implications for providers to centralize food preference fulfillment in care planning, and to use food preferences to address dining quality concerns.

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来源期刊
Journal of Nutrition in Gerontology and Geriatrics
Journal of Nutrition in Gerontology and Geriatrics Nursing-Nutrition and Dietetics
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: The Journal of Nutrition in Gerontology and Geriatrics publishes original research studies that are directly relevant to clinical and community nutrition issues that affect older adults. Epidemiologic and community-based studies are suitable for JNE, as are well-controlled clinical trials of preventive and therapeutic nutritional interventions. The Journal of Nutrition in Gerontology and Geriatrics invites papers on a broad array of topics in the nutrition and aging field, including but not limited to studies of: preventive nutrition, nutritional interventions for chronic disease, aging effects on nutritional requirements, nutritional status and dietary intake behaviors, nutritional frailty and functional status, usefulness of supplements, programmatic interventions, transitions in care and long term care, and community nutrition issues.
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