2021
DOI: 10.1002/ncp.10785
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Systematic review of clinicians’ knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about nutrition in intensive care

Abstract: Nutrition is a key component of care for critically ill patients; yet nutrition delivery is below international recommendations. In order to improve nutrition delivery to critically ill patients, an understanding of the barriers that prevent guideline adherence is required. It is known that clinicians' knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs of the role of nutrition may act as a potential barrier to nutrition delivery, but whether this remains true in critical care is unknown. The aim of this systematic scoping revi… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…In addition, fasting has been demonstrated, by ultrasound, to not necessarily precipitate an empty stomach [37]. The predominance of no nutrition prescription may also be a reflection of the lack of value or perceived prioritization of nutrition, which has been described previously in critically ill patients [38,39].…”
Section: Considerations With Route Of Nutrition During Noninvasive Ve...mentioning
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In addition, fasting has been demonstrated, by ultrasound, to not necessarily precipitate an empty stomach [37]. The predominance of no nutrition prescription may also be a reflection of the lack of value or perceived prioritization of nutrition, which has been described previously in critically ill patients [38,39].…”
Section: Considerations With Route Of Nutrition During Noninvasive Ve...mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Although the reasons for this were not documented, this is likely driven by the potential need for intubation, with patients commonly fasted prior to intubation [35 ], and a recently published randomized controlled trial in 2138 ICU patients suggests fasting for extubation is noninferior to continued enteral feeding to the time of extubation [36 ultrasound, to not necessarily precipitate an empty stomach [37]. The predominance of no nutrition prescription may also be a reflection of the lack of value or perceived prioritization of nutrition, which has been described previously in critically ill patients [38,39].…”
Section: Nil Nutritionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[36][37][38] In contrast, the relative success of these protocols in the intensive care unit setting may be due a culture where nurses often adopt responsibility for nutrition provision, possibly reinforced by low dietetics resourcing in some intensive care unit settings. 39 Achieving reductions in potentially unnecessary dietitian review of EN feeding rates may require targeted strategies to support doctors and nurses to feel confident in initiating and monitoring EN for short-term feeding. In the closely controlled and monitored intensive care unit setting, standardised care protocols are viewed as a way to operationalise nutrition guidelines, enabling provision of best practice nutrition care.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Factors that influence the delivery of physical rehabilitation include patient physical and physiological capacity, safety, culture and teamwork, clinician beliefs about benefits/risks, and environmental aspects including staffing and equipment [29]. Similar work is emerging to understand the barriers and enablers to the successful delivery of nutrition during critical illness that includes physiological barriers [30] and clinicians' knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs [31] Further, understanding the outcomes that matter to patients and families as well as the health system will be important to define in the future. The recently published CONCISE core outcome set will be useful to improve harmonization of future study design [5].…”
Section: Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Factors that influence the delivery of physical rehabilitation include patient physical and physiological capacity, safety, culture and teamwork, clinician beliefs about benefits/risks, and environmental aspects including staffing and equipment [29]. Similar work is emerging to understand the barriers and enablers to the successful delivery of nutrition during critical illness that includes physiological barriers [30] and clinicians’ knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs [31]…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%