Treatment of malnutrition in elderly.

  • Always screen for malnutrition in the elderly.

  • Treat the underlying medical conditions.

  • Screen for delirium and dementia and manage them.

  • Reduce drugs and minimise adverse drug reactions and drug to drug interactions.

  • Diagnose the cause of pain and treat pain.

  • Diagnose and treat nausea.

  • Treat constipation.

  • Assess swallowing safety.

  • Good oral and dental hygiene.

  • Diagnose and treat dry mouth.

  • Have all meals sitting upright out of bed when possible.

  • Give the older patients enough time to eat their meal.

  • Set up meals with all packets of juice, sauces and butter opened.

  • Document how much food was left uneaten and find out why.

  • Present high quality meals as we would expect in a restaurant. Why should our elderly relatives have anything less!

  • Use the best freshest ingredients, not frozen meals.

  • Provide lost of extra sweets, cakes, chocolate biscuits and ice cream for extra calories.

  • Dietician review of calorie/kilojoule requirements to improve nutrition and weight gain.

  • Early mobility and exercise can increase appetite.

For more information read Dr Peter Lipski’s book “Your Elderly Parents Failing Health. Is It Ageing Or A Treatable Condition”.

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Physical signs of malnutrition in older adults.