Oates Lloyd L, Price Christopher I
Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Stroke Research, Wansbeck General Hospital, Woodhorn Lane, Ashington, Northumberland NE63 9JJ UK.
Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Stroke Research, Wansbeck General Hospital, Woodhorn Lane, Ashington, Northumberland NE63 9JJ UK ; Newcastle University Institute for Ageing, Newcastle University Stroke Research Group, 3-4 Claremont Terrace, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU UK.
BMC Nurs. 2017 Jan 17;16:4. doi: 10.1186/s12912-016-0195-x. eCollection 2017.
Older patients in hospital may be unable to maintain hydration by drinking, leading to intravenous fluid replacement, complications and a longer length of stay. We undertook a systematic review to describe clinical assessment tools which identify patients at risk of insufficient oral fluid intake and the impact of simple interventions to promote drinking, in hospital and care home settings.
MEDLINE, CINAHL, and EMBASE databases and two internet search engines (Google and Google Scholar) were examined. Articles were included when the main focus was use of a hydration/dehydration risk assessment in an adult population with/without a care intervention to promote oral hydration in hospitals or care homes. Reviews which used findings to develop new assessments were also included. Single case reports, laboratory results only, single technology assessments or non-oral fluid replacement in patients who were already dehydrated were excluded. Interventions where nutritional intake was the primary focus with a hydration component were also excluded. Identified articles were screened for relevance and quality before a narrative synthesis. No statistical analysis was planned.
From 3973 citations, 23 articles were included. Rather than prevention of poor oral intake, most focused upon identification of patients already in negative fluid balance using information from the history, patient inspection and urinalysis. Nine formal hydration assessments were identified, five of which had an accompanying intervention/ care protocol, and there were no RCT or large observational studies. Interventions to provide extra opportunities to drink such as prompts, preference elicitation and routine beverage carts appeared to support hydration maintenance, further research is required. Despite a lack of knowledge of fluid requirements and dehydration risk factors amongst staff, there was no strong evidence that increasing awareness alone would be beneficial for patients.
Despite descriptions of features associated with dehydration, there is insufficient evidence to recommend a specific clinical assessment which could identify older persons at risk of poor oral fluid intake; however there is evidence to support simple care interventions which promote drinking particularly for individuals with cognitive impairment.
PROSPERO 2014:CRD42014015178.
住院老年患者可能无法通过饮水维持水合状态,从而需要静脉补液,这会引发并发症并延长住院时间。我们进行了一项系统综述,以描述在医院和养老院环境中,用于识别存在经口液体摄入不足风险患者的临床评估工具,以及促进饮水的简单干预措施的效果。
检索了MEDLINE、CINAHL和EMBASE数据库以及两个互联网搜索引擎(谷歌和谷歌学术)。当文章主要关注在成年人群中使用水合/脱水风险评估,无论是否有护理干预以促进医院或养老院中的经口补液时,予以纳入。使用研究结果开发新评估方法的综述也包括在内。排除单病例报告、仅实验室结果、单技术评估或已脱水患者的非经口补液。营养摄入为主要关注点且包含水合成分的干预措施也被排除。在进行叙述性综合分析之前,对筛选出的文章进行相关性和质量筛选。未计划进行统计分析。
从3973篇文献中,纳入了23篇文章。大多数研究并非关注预防经口摄入不足,而是利用病史、患者检查和尿液分析信息,重点识别已处于负水平衡的患者。确定了9种正式的水合评估方法,其中5种伴有干预/护理方案,且没有随机对照试验或大型观察性研究。提供额外饮水机会的干预措施,如提示、询问偏好和常规饮料车,似乎有助于维持水合状态,但仍需进一步研究。尽管工作人员对液体需求和脱水风险因素缺乏了解,但没有有力证据表明仅提高认识对患者有益。
尽管描述了与脱水相关的特征,但没有足够证据推荐一种能识别经口液体摄入不足风险老年人的特定临床评估方法;然而,有证据支持促进饮水的简单护理干预措施,特别是对认知障碍患者。
PROSPERO 2014:CRD42014015178