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How a Long-Term Care Dietitian Can Help Your Loved One

Dietitians play a vital role in long-term care – so much so that in 2016, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services updated its regulations, requiring every long-term care community to have a licensed registered dietitian or certified dietary manager on staff. Regulations also stipulate that this food and nutrition specialist must be an integral member of the skilled nursing community’s interdisciplinary team.

A long-term care dietitian is essential because of the important role nutrition plays as we age. A good senior nutrition program created by a dietitian in a long-term care setting helps delay or prevent certain health conditions in skilled nursing residents, including unintended weight loss and dehydration, thereby improving residents’ overall quality of life.

Medical Nutrition Therapy For Seniors: Long-Term Care Considerations

Nutrition for seniors often requires a nuanced, customized approach. In addition to helping healthy residents continue to eat well-balanced diets, long-term care dietitians must create diets from scratch for residents who are recovering from injury, illness, or other medical conditions. Dietitians in long-term care communities have to consider a variety of factors that affect an older adult’s interest or ability to eat:

Decreased taste and loss of appetite: Some medications can change the taste of food; dentures may make it difficult to chew. Taste buds also shrink in size as we age, and our taste and sense of smell decrease.

Depression: If an older adult has lost a spouse or long-time partner, eating alone may not be appetizing, so they choose not to eat. They also may forget to eat if no one is around to remind them to cook or sit down for a meal.

Nutrient absorption: Vitamins and nutrients aren’t absorbed as well by our bodies as we age, which can lead to malnutrition in seniors and vitamin and mineral deficiencies. Foods high in some nutrients and vitamins may no longer appeal to older adults’ palates due to the food’s texture or perceived lack of flavor.

Prior quality of food: Some older adults may have been very frugal over their lifetimes, eating cost-conscious, pre-packaged, processed foods that are lower in nutrients but higher in salt, fat, and sugar. This can result in poorer overall health or the earlier onset of specific diseases, such as diabetes or high blood pressure.

Seniors and Nutrition: What a Long-Term Care Dietitian Can Do to Help

There are four key ways a long-term care dietitian overcomes these challenges – and improves the quality of life for your loved one living in a skilled nursing community.

 

Senior couple eating healthy dinner

1. Prescribing therapeutic diets. As part of the 2016 regulation changes by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, a skilled nursing community’s attending physician could delegate the job of prescribing a resident’s nutrition care and diet to the registered dietitian. The goal of this regulation change is to improve the responsiveness to each resident’s unique needs.

For example, if a resident has diabetes or high blood pressure, the dietitian may prescribe a specific diet that omits sugar or salt. However, these diets can be overly strict, less palatable, and limited in variety, which is why nutrition professionals in many skilled nursing communities are embracing an approach called a liberalized diet.

2. Offering liberalized therapeutic diets. Registered dietitians can craft a therapeutic diet while considering each resident’s goals, informed decisions, and preferences. The idea is to keep the resident healthy while still providing them with foods they prefer. Giving seniors access to their favorite foods in moderation can also help combat loss of appetite in seniors.

That could include being served a smaller cut of red meat once a month or eating a reduced portion of their favorite dessert. This approach allows the resident to enjoy the foods they love instead of having them removed from their diet entirely. And the greater benefits can be seen in reduced malnutrition and improved quality of life.

3. Promoting person-centered care. The focus for the nutrition professional is on ensuring the resident is at the center of the decision-making process so that they feel more in control of their choices. Registered dietitians may promote person-centered care by giving the resident the choice of food selections, meal times and dining locations.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services encourages skilled nursing communities to implement person-centered care. Not only does this approach give residents a voice in when, where, and what they eat, but it can also decrease overall healthcare costs.

4. Preventing malnutrition and dehydration. Malnutrition can have terrible consequences for older adults, such as an increase in falls,  healing time, and hospital admissions. Yet, it often goes unrecognized in some long-term care communities, which is why having a nutrition professional on the team is so crucial.

Older adults often have difficulty swallowing and may not get as much hydration as they need. Some medicines can cause dehydration as well. And as people age, sometimes their sense of thirst will decrease. All this can lead to serious health issues like urinary tract infections, kidney stones, and even kidney failure.

A registered dietitian or other nutrition professional can recognize the signs of dehydration quickly and add foods into the resident’s diet that have a high water content, like melons, cucumbers, or broths. Skilled nursing community residents may also be served a wider selection of liquids, in case they don’t like drinking water – something a good nutrition professional would already know about your loved one.

Meeting these four responsibilities ensures a community successfully maintains both the residents’ health and quality of life. A long-term care dietitian is key to that success.

 

Dietitian helping seniors eat healthy meals

Find Skilled Nursing Services and Long-Term Care Nutrition Expertise at The Waterford

Skilled nursing services at The Waterford include a full-time dietitian skilled in therapeutic diets, liberalized diets, person-centered care, and preventing malnutrition and dehydration. Discover all the ways in which our long-term care dietitian can play an essential role in your loved one’s health care and quality of life. Simply complete the form below or call us at 888.672.7494.

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