“…Therefore, nutritional risk screening by nurses of patients on admission to hospital is seldom performed as routine (Leistra, Visser, van der Hout, Langius, & Kruizenga, 2013;Wentzel, Hall-Lord, Bååth, & Larsson, 2008), and evidence suggests persistent undertreatment of patients at risk of or already with malnutrition (Agarwal et al, 2012;Akner & Cederholm, 2001;Bansal, Scott, Stewart, & Cockerell, 2005;Kondrup et al, 2002;Kyle, Pirlich, Lochs, Schuetz, & Pichard, 2005;Rasmussen et al, 2004). Nurses' lack of time and poor knowledge of nutrition care processes, together with a lack of role clarity and shared responsibility, are the main barriers to efficient screening for malnutrition (Geurden, Franck, Van Looy, Weyler, & Ysebaert, 2012;Geurden, Franck, Weyler, & Ysebaert, 2011;Green & James, 2013;Raja et al, 2008;Ross, Mudge, Young, & Banks, 2011). Furthermore, nurses have a lot of competing priorities at mealtimes, which causes a sense of powerlessness to prioritize nutrition in the hospital setting (Ross et al, 2011).…”