Nursing
Diagnosis: Feeding Self-care deficit
Linda S. Williams
NANDA Definition:
Impaired ability to perform or complete feeding activities
Defining Characteristics: Inability to swallow food; inability to prepare food for ingestion; inability to handle utensils; inability to chew food; inability to use assistive device; inability to get food onto utensils; inability to open containers; inability to ingest food safely; inability to manipulate food in mouth; inability to bring food from a receptacle to the mouth; inability to complete a meal; inability to ingest food in a socially acceptable manner; inability to pick up cup or glass; inability to ingest sufficient food
Related Factors: Weakness or tiredness; severe anxiety; neuromuscular impairment; pain; perceptual or cognitive impairment; discomfort; environmental barriers; decreased or lack of motivation; musculoskeletal impairment
Defining Characteristics: Inability to swallow food; inability to prepare food for ingestion; inability to handle utensils; inability to chew food; inability to use assistive device; inability to get food onto utensils; inability to open containers; inability to ingest food safely; inability to manipulate food in mouth; inability to bring food from a receptacle to the mouth; inability to complete a meal; inability to ingest food in a socially acceptable manner; inability to pick up cup or glass; inability to ingest sufficient food
Related Factors: Weakness or tiredness; severe anxiety; neuromuscular impairment; pain; perceptual or cognitive impairment; discomfort; environmental barriers; decreased or lack of motivation; musculoskeletal impairment
NOTE: See suggested Functional Level Classification in
the care plan Impaired
physical Mobility.
NOC
Outcomes (Nursing Outcomes Classification)
Suggested NOC Labels
·
Self-Care:
Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)
·
Self-Care:
Eating
Client Outcomes
·
Feeds
self
·
States
satisfaction with ability to use adaptive devices for feeding
·
Provides
assistance with feeding when necessary (caregiver)
NIC Interventions (Nursing
Interventions Classification)
Suggested NIC Labels
·
Feeding
·
Self-Care
Assistance: Feeding
Nursing Interventions and Rationales
·
Observe
for cause of inability to feed self independently (see Related Factors). Self-care requires multisystem
competence. Restorative program planning is specific to problems that interfere
with self-care (Phaneuf, 1996).
·
Assess
client's ability to feed self. Test gag reflex bilaterally, and note specific
deficits. Functional
assessment provides ADLs task analysis data for matching client's ability to
feed self with caregiver's level of assistance (Van Ort, Phillips, 1995).
·
Ask
client for input on methods to facilitate eating and feeding (e.g., cultural
foods, other food and fluid preferences) and provide four entrée choices,
including ethnic choice. When
clients are given a choice, their food intake increases (Kayser-Jones, 1997).
·
Request
referral for occupational and physical therapy; request a dietician. Collaboration and correlation of
activities with interdisciplinary team members increases the client's mastery
of self-care tasks.
·
Ensure
that client has dentures, hearing aids, and glasses in place. Adaptive devices increase
opportunity for self-care.
·
Use
any necessary adaptive feeding equipment (e.g., rocker knives, plate guards,
suction mats, built-up handles on utensils, scoop dishes, large-handled cups). Adaptive devices increase
independence.
·
Seat
client at table using name card and place mat with meal in visual range next to
role model who can eat, if applicable. Familiar
feeding patterns and cues increase self-feeding (Van Ort, Phillips, 1995).
·
Help
client into sitting position; ensure that client's head is flexed slightly
forward and shoulders are supported while eating and for 1 hour after a meal. Gravity assists with swallowing, and
aspiration is decreased when sitting upright.
·
Prepare
meal items before client begins eating. Preparing
items for the client conserves energy for hand-to-mouth activities.
·
Provide
small portions of favorite foods, one entrée at a time, at proper serving
temperature. Food intake
is increased when meal appeals to client and is simplified (Kayser-Jones,
Schell, 1997).
·
Provide
consistency in caregiver and meal activities. Assigning caregivers to clients rather than dining
areas allows caregiver to learn client's needs and promotes a positive attitude
between caregiver and client (Kennedy-Holzapfel et al, 1996).
·
Caregiver
should sit beside client (on client's unaffected side) at eye level. Sitting at eye level with client
increases eye contact and promotes a relaxed atmosphere that increases consumed
food (Kennedy-Holzapfel et al, 1996).
·
Caregiver
should sit at a half circle table if interacting with a group of clients and
should remain with clients until meal is completed. Environmental strategies that reduce interruptions and
distractions increase food intake (Van Ort, Phillips, 1995).
·
Encourage
participation; guide client's hand through task if needed; provide cues and
pantomime desired behaviors. Experiencing
the normal process of a task through guided practice facilitates optimal
relearning (Tappen, 1994).
·
Allow
client to participate in feeding as able; provide verbal prompting; provide
praise for all feeding attempts; increase tasks as able. The client should be an active
participant in feeding instead of a passive recipient of food (Osburn,
Marshall, 1993).
·
Plan
activities to prevent fatigue before meals. Energy
conservation increases activity tolerance and promotes self-care.
·
Provide
medication for pain before meals if needed. Pain
relief promotes participation in self-care.
·
Provide
client with a pleasant social meal environment. Keep the environment free of
toileting devices and odors, avoid painful procedures before meals, remove lids
from tray, and provide clean utensils for separate courses. Attention to the aesthetics of
feeding increases food intake (Kayser-Jones, Schell, 1997).
·
Do
not mix different foods together when assisting client with eating. Mixing foods together decreases
client dignity and reduces appeal of food, decreasing food intake
(Kayser-Jones, Schell, 1997).
·
Play
slow-tempo, quiet music during meals. Agitated
behaviors may communicate anxiety from a noisy, overwhelming environment; quiet
music can mask this, resulting in relaxed and smiling clients (Denney, 1997).
·
Encourage
client to keep food on the unaffected side of mouth with a rocking motion to
deposit the food. Keeping
food away from the affected side of the mouth prevents pocketing of food
(Donahue, 1990).
·
Be
prepared to intervene if choking occurs; have suction equipment readily
available and know the Heimlich maneuver. Dysphagia
increases the risk of choking (Donahue, 1990).
·
Provide
oral hygiene after eating and check for pocketing of food. Aspiration can occur from food left
in the mouth.
Geriatric
·
Allow
client with dentures adequate time to chew. Chewing
with dentures takes four times longer to reach a certain level of mastication
than chewing with natural teeth.
·
Choose
soft foods rather than liquids, or use dietary thickeners. Choking occurs more easily with
clear liquids than with solid or soft foods.
·
Assess
for intolerance to food texture and, if found, reverse food texture pattern as
tolerated, progressing finally to texture stage of thick liquids. Dementia clients lose ability to
tolerate texture-pattern reverses from regular to soft to mechanical soft to
mechanical soft with chopped meat to puree to thick liquids, and pocketing of
food is seen, along with statements of choking and spitting of food (Boylston
et al, 1995).
·
Provide
finger foods for clients with Alzheimer's disease and place in hands as needed
to cue. Finger foods
attract patient attention and increase involvement in meal. They are easier to
handle than utensils and, as a result, weight is maintained (Slotesz, Dayton,
1995). Finger foods can be nutritious and can allow independence and the choice
of what and when to eat (Kennedy-Holzapfel et al, 1996).
Home Care Interventions
·
Based
on functional assessment and rehabilitation capacity, refer for home health
aide services to assist with feeding. Support
by home health aides preserves the energy of the client and provides respite
for caregivers.
·
Cue
cognitively impaired client when feeding. Cognitively
impaired clients can participate successfully in many activities with cueing.
Participation in self-care can enhance the self-esteem of cognitively impaired
clients.
·
Respect
the preference of terminally ill clients to refuse nutrition or assistance with
eating. Refer to care plans for Imbalanced
Nutrition: less than body requirements and Impaired Swallowing.
·
If
terminally ill client requests nutrition, take special care to provide foods
and assistive devices that protect the client from aspiration, minimize energy
requirements, and meet the client's taste preferences. Terminally ill clients have altered
taste and other sensations, which impacts their willingness to eat or to invest
time or energy in eating.
Client/Family Teaching
·
Teach
client how to use adaptive devices. Adaptive
devices increase independence.
·
Teach
client with hemianopsia to turn head so that the plate is in the line of
vision. Compensation for
hemianopsia is done by turning head to place items in line of vision (Needham, 1993).
·
Teach
visually impaired client to locate foods according to numbers on a clock.
·
Teach
caregiver-feeding techniques that prevent choking (e.g., sitting beside client
on the unaffected side, feeding client slowly, checking food temperature,
providing fluid between bites, establishing a method to communicate readiness
for next bite, limiting conversation while chewing).
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