Background
Methods
Study design and methodology
Research question
Relevant studies and rationale
Data extraction
Data analysis, collation, and summary
Results
The aims of the included studies
Focusa | Author(s), years, Country | Main purposes | Study design |
---|---|---|---|
Intervention(s) effectiveness | Watson, 1993 (UK) [6] | Issues in measuring feeding problems; direct and indirect interventions; measuring intervention effectiveness Target population: older adults with dementia in any context | O + research agenda |
Amella, 1998 (USA) [24] | Direct interventions (dietary needs) and indirect interventions (social, cultural, and interactive components of mealtime) Target population: elderly individuals; special strategies for people with cognitive disabilities | O + clinical protocol | |
Manthorpe & Watson, 2003 (UK) [25] | A census of areas well-developed on feeding difficulties, as well as of areas with little knowledge and potential improvement Target population: patients with dementia and their caregivers in any setting | Position paper + research agenda | |
Watson & Green, 2006 (UK) [26] | Interventions to promote oral nutritional intake Target population: older people with dementia in any setting | SR | |
Aselage et al., 2011 (USA) [7] | Exploration of the state of the science related to assisted hand-feeding Target population: people with dementia in NHs | O | |
Chang & Roberts, 2011 (USA) [27] | Areas of feeding difficulties (initiating feeding, maintaining attention, getting food into the mouth, chewing food and swallowing food); their specific manifestations, observable behaviour associated with each; multidisciplinary and feeding strategies documented as effective Target population: patients with dementia in Hospitals and NHs | O | |
Hanson et al., 2011 (USA) [28] | Benefits of oral feeding options Target population: people with dementia in LTC | SR | |
Jackson et al., 2011 (UK) [29] | Effectiveness of mealtime interventions Target population: adults over the age of sixty with dementia living in any setting (no home) | SR | |
Abbot et al., 2013 (UK) [21] | Effectiveness of mealtime interventions Target population: elderly individuals living in residential care, including also people with dementia | SR + MA | |
Liu et al., 2014 (USA) [10] | Effectiveness of interventions on mealtime difficulties Target population: older people with dementia in any setting | SR | |
Bunn et al., 2015 (UK) [30] | Effectiveness of interventions to increase fluid intake and reduce risk of dehydration Target population: older adults who could drink living in residential, LTC special dementia units | SR | |
Douglas & Lawrence, 2015 (USA) [31] | Evaluate the research on environment-based interventions to improve nutritional status Target population: older adult and people with dementia, with preference for those live in long-term settings | NR | |
Liu et al., 2015 (USA) [8] | Effectiveness of interventions on eating performance Target population: older adults with dementia in LTC | SR | |
Abdelhamid et al., 2016 (UK) [12] | Effectiveness of direct interventions on food and fluid intake Target population: older adults with dementia or with mild cognitive impairment in any setting | SR + MA | |
Bunn et al., 2016 (UK) [32] | Effectiveness of direct interventions on food and fluid intake Target population: older adults with dementia or with mild cognitive impairment in any setting | SR | |
Concept analysis | Chang & Roberts, 2008 (USA) [29] | Characteristics of eating difficulty, its antecedents and consequences providing direction for assessment and management Target population: older adults with dementia in any setting | CA on SR |
Aselage & Amella, 2010 (USA) [33] | Characteristics, antecedents and consequences of mealtime difficulties providing direction for assessment and management Target population: older adults with dementia | CA |
Conceptual frameworks
Conceptual framework | Research examples reported in the included reviews |
---|---|
Biological processes | |
Structural and transient impairment; Exceed disability [35] | Less supportive environments are significantly associated with eating excess disabilities [8] Enhancing table contrast; visual stimulation during evening meals; high and low visual contrast crockery may reduce transient impairments [21] |
Swallowing impairments [36] | Offering appropriate or modified food texture; dysphagia diet food modification [12] |
Cognitive processes | |
Mirror neurons [37] | Encouraging older adult to eat in the dining room to increase intake [29] |
Montessori method [38] | Using Montessori-based activities, simplifying the process of mealtime [10] |
Spaced Retrieval [39] | |
Errorless learning model of everyday tasks [40] | |
Emotional and behavioural processes | |
Offering over lunchtime preferred; ‘quiet’; ‘relaxing’ music; at dinner time, offering music; ‘therapeutic recreation’ music [25, 31] Reducing noise (e.g. from television) and encouraging personal conversation between patient and caregiver; avoiding distractions [31] | |
Progressively lowered stress threshold [43] | |
Emotional and social habits processes | |
Family-style eating [44] | Assessing preferences in terms of breaking meals (or not) with snacks; meal timing, social involvement of caregivers; seasonal variations [7, 30] Creating a family environment; a familiar activity prior to lunch; using standard dinnerware instead of disposable tableware and bibs; table-appropriate height versus eating in wheelchair or in bed [8, 31] Decentralising bulk service as opposed to pre-plated meals; maintaining the ability to serve own food (not-plated) [31] |
Familiarity [45] | |
Individual, interpersonal and environment processes | |
Caring [25] | Where individuals with varying levels of dementia ate together without the staff, the person with lower dementia became the caregiver to those with severe dementia [7] Individualising feeding assistance one-to-one; activating the primary nurse in mealtime care; the same carer feeding the patient; enhancing the quality of the interaction between the dyad; offering touch, guidance, redirection, providing compassionate care; offering mealtime assistance [7, 8, 10, 27, 32] Reducing the separation of eating from meal preparation especially for older woman; engaging in meal creation that may stimulate the appetite; food prepared in areas adjacent to or in dining area to stimulate appetite [21, 23, 25, 27] |
Feeding difficulties [34] | |
Mealtime difficulties [33] | |
Mealtimes as active processes [48] | |
Five Aspects of Meal Model [49] | |
Making the Most of Mealtime [50] |
Intervention(s)
Environmental interventionsa | Behavioural interventionsb | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Author(s), year | Authors’ classifications of interventions | Change of routine | Change of social context | Change of environment | Otherc | Education/ training of individuals with dementia | Education or training of caregivers | Otherc |
Watson, 1993 [6] | 1. Perspective (feeding problems; directing nursing intervention), 2. Research problems (mouthful; individualized changes), 3. Research into feeding problems (index of independence; ethical issues) | * | * | * | ||||
Amella, 1998 [24] | 1. History and intake assessment, 2. Intake, 3. Cognition, 4. Environment/ambiance, 4. Relationship with caregiver at meal | * | * | * | ||||
Manthorpe & Watson, 2003 [25] | No classification | * | * | * | * | * | ||
Watson & Green, 2006 [26] | No classification | * | * | * | ||||
Aselage et al., 2011 [7] | 1. Factors influencing mealtime difficulties, 2. Interventions to improve mealtime difficulties | * | * | |||||
Chang & Roberts, 2011 [27] | 1. Initiating feeding, 2. Maintaining attention, 3. Getting food into mouth, 4. Chewing food, 5. Swallowing food | * | * | * | * | |||
Hanson et al., 2011 [28] | 1. Studies of high calorie supplements for dementia, 2. Studies of assisted feeding and other intervention | * | * | * | * | |||
Jackson et al., 2011 [29] | 1. Educational interventions, 2. Changes to the dining environment and table setting, 3. Changes to menu provision and food service, 4. Increased dietetic input and enhanced nutritional screening | * | * | * | * | |||
Abbott et al., 2013 [21] | 1. Food improvement interventions, 2. Food service, 3. Dining environment, 4. Staff training, 5. Feeding assistance (feeding assistance & food service) | * | * | * | ||||
Liu et al., 2014 [10] | 1. Nutritional supplements, 2. Training/education programs, 3. Environment/routine modification, 4. Feeding assistance, 5. Mixed interventions | * | * | * | * | * | ||
Bunn et al., 2015 [30] | 1. Drinking vessel characteristics, 2. Drink characteristics, 3. Physical and social setting for drinking, 4. Institutional factors, 5. Resident assessment instrument minimum data set, 6. Staffing, 7. Ownership and type of facility, 8. Size and location of facility, 9. Care aimed at increasing fluid intake, 10. Care aiming to increase fluid intake and including assistance with toileting | * | * | * | * | * | * | |
Douglas & Lawrence, 2015 [31] | 1. Feeding assistance, 2. Volunteers, 3. Assistance and training programs, 4. Meal service delivery style, 5. Bulk and buffet-style dining, 6. Family-style dining, 7. Dining room environment and ambiance, 8. Lighting and contrast, 9. Music, 10. Other environment-related considerations | * | * | * | * | |||
Liu et al., 2015 [8] | 1. Interventions to optimize eating performance, 2. Training programs for residents or nursing assistants, 3. Mealtime assistance from nursing caregiver, 4. Environment modification addressing environmental factors, 5. Multi-component interventions addressing personal and environmental factors | * | * | * | * | * | ||
Abdelhamid et al., 2016 [12] | 1. Oral Nutrition supplement, 2. Effects of interventions for swallowing problems, 3. Effects of food and drink modification, 4. Effects of eating and drinking assistance, 5. Effects of interventions with a strong social element around eating and drinking, 7. Finger food, 8. Other food modification, 9. Food modification as part of multi-component intervention, 10. Effects of eating and drinking assistance | * | * | * | ||||
Bunn et al., 2016 [32] | 1. Dining environment and food, 2. Education/training, 3. Behavioural interventions, 4. Exercise interventions, 5. Multi-component interventions | * | * | * | * | * |