Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 601: Effect of a Large-Scale Production and Quality-Controlled Program for Texture-Modified Diets on Older Hospitalized Patients with Oropharyngeal Dysphagia

Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 601: Effect of a Large-Scale Production and Quality-Controlled Program for Texture-Modified Diets on Older Hospitalized Patients with Oropharyngeal Dysphagia

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18040601

Authors:
Adrian Nuñez-Lara
Paula Viñas
Marta Cera
Marta Santiago
Laura Minguella
Abel Llovet
Pere Clavé

Background/Objectives: Several studies described how diets should be adapted to meet textural, nutritional and organoleptic needs of older people with oropharyngeal dysphagia. However, few studies have evaluated the implementation of texture-modified diets (TMD) in a real clinical context. In 2024, a TMD program was introduced in a 400-bed hospital. The aim of this study was to describe the impact in production, texture standardization and acceptance of this program. Methods: This is an observational study that compares the TMD data of 2023 versus 2024. In this period, AI techniques and clinical staff training were implemented to increase TMD prescriptions. A quantitative weekly quality control was carried out to standardize the rheological and textural properties of the TMD. Qualitative questionnaires were used to evaluate acceptance and palatability in both years. Results: The number of TMD meal services served increased in 51.60% (9766 in 2023, 14,806 in 2024). Viscosity range variability in thick purees (IDDSI Level 4, target shear viscosity of 1500 ± 20% mPa·s) was reduced from 600–4800 mPa·s in 2023 (58.74% variability) to 1000–2400 mPa·s in 2024 (27.91% variability). Fork-mashable TMD (IDDSI Level 6) presented limitations in standardization, due to the lack of quantitative reference values for textural parameters. The meal intake consumption remained around 70% in both years. Conclusions: The large-scale hospital TMD production program was associated with an increased number of patients with dysphagia receiving TMD, reduced texture variability, and high levels of palatability and patient acceptability. These process-level improvements are expected to support swallowing safety, although clinical outcomes were not directly assessed.

​Background/Objectives: Several studies described how diets should be adapted to meet textural, nutritional and organoleptic needs of older people with oropharyngeal dysphagia. However, few studies have evaluated the implementation of texture-modified diets (TMD) in a real clinical context. In 2024, a TMD program was introduced in a 400-bed hospital. The aim of this study was to describe the impact in production, texture standardization and acceptance of this program. Methods: This is an observational study that compares the TMD data of 2023 versus 2024. In this period, AI techniques and clinical staff training were implemented to increase TMD prescriptions. A quantitative weekly quality control was carried out to standardize the rheological and textural properties of the TMD. Qualitative questionnaires were used to evaluate acceptance and palatability in both years. Results: The number of TMD meal services served increased in 51.60% (9766 in 2023, 14,806 in 2024). Viscosity range variability in thick purees (IDDSI Level 4, target shear viscosity of 1500 ± 20% mPa·s) was reduced from 600–4800 mPa·s in 2023 (58.74% variability) to 1000–2400 mPa·s in 2024 (27.91% variability). Fork-mashable TMD (IDDSI Level 6) presented limitations in standardization, due to the lack of quantitative reference values for textural parameters. The meal intake consumption remained around 70% in both years. Conclusions: The large-scale hospital TMD production program was associated with an increased number of patients with dysphagia receiving TMD, reduced texture variability, and high levels of palatability and patient acceptability. These process-level improvements are expected to support swallowing safety, although clinical outcomes were not directly assessed. Read More

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