Baxter International Inc, a global leader in PN therapy, partnered with the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (ASPEN) and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to co-author a new statistical brief - ''Characteristics of Hospital Stays Involving Malnutrition, 2013'' - about the often overlooked consequences of disease-related malnutrition.
The new statistical data characterizes the impact of malnutrition in US hospitalized patients in human and economic costs - concluding malnutrition is associated with up to five times higher risk of in-hospital deaths, may result in two times longer hospital stays, and creates an estimated $42 billion burden to the healthcare system.
''I believe the fundamental reason malnutrition is underdiagnosed and undertreated is that we lack objective, measurable means to diagnose the condition,'' said Paul Wischmeyer, M.D., E.D.I.C., Department of Anesthesiology and Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center. ''I teach that nutrition assessment has to occur in every patient, and at-risk patients should be started on thoughtful nutrition therapy within 48 hours.''
Malnutrition is characterized by a lack of adequate calories, protein, or other nutrients needed for tissue maintenance and repair, an important element of recovery. With the exception of post-surgical patients, fewer than 7 per cent of the nearly 2 million US hospitalized patients identified as malnourished received enteral or parenteral nutrition. Parenteral nutrition (PN) is an intravenous (IV) therapy, which may include a balance of protein, carbohydrates, lipids (fats), electrolytes, vitamins and trace elements for patients who cannot ingest food orally or enterally (tube-fed).
The statistical brief is the outcome of a comprehensive evaluation of the AHRQ Healthcare Cost and Utilization (HCUP) database, the nation's most comprehensive source of hospital data, including information on inpatient care, ambulatory care and emergency department visits. The statistics are national estimates on the characteristics of malnutrition reported during non-maternal and non-neonatal hospital inpatient stays.
''The often overlooked consequences of disease-related malnutrition are significant from a human and healthcare cost perspective; and while the study only looked at US statistics, this is a global concern,'' said Mary Hise Brown, PhD, RDN, CNSC, senior medical director, Baxter, and co-author of the AHRQ statistical brief. ''To advance patient care, it's critical that all aspects of the public and private healthcare industry work together to increase awareness about the need to better assess hospitalized patients for malnutrition and how to provide the best nutritional therapy for their condition.''
Both Baxter and ASPEN are committed to raising awareness about the consequences of disease-related malnutrition and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment. Healthcare providers can learn more at Baxter's Nutrition Academy online, which provides practical guidance on how and when to implement parenteral nutrition, to help make it accessible to more patients with nutritional deficits. ASPEN also offers a comprehensive Malnutrition Solutions Center online for healthcare providers, patients and caregivers to learn about how to recognize and manage disease-related malnutrition.