Strengthening the Diagnosis and Treatment of Malnutrition Through Increased Nurse Involvement: A Quality Improvement Project From Pediatric Wards in Mozambique

Key Findings

Baseline performance in key malnutrition measures on pediatric wards other than malnutrition in 2 Mozambican referral hospitals was low, with only 24.4% of children adequately screened for malnutrition.

A project for nurse engagement that used quality improvement methodology resulted in important advancements in nutritional screening and referral for outpatient nutritional rehabilitation after discharge.

Key Implication

Health policymakers and hospital medical and nursing leadership in resource-restrained settings may consider task-sharing, particularly nurse engagement, and quality improvement methods to strengthen care and treatment for malnourished children in pediatric wards.

ABSTRACTBackground:

Childhood acute malnutrition continues to be a serious health problem in many low-resource settings in Africa. On pediatric wards in Mozambique, missed opportunities for timely diagnosis and treatment of malnutrition may lead to poor health outcomes. To improve inpatient nutritional care, a quality improvement (QI) project was implemented that aimed to engage pediatric nurses in inpatient malnutrition diagnosis and treatment.

Methods:

In 2 Mozambican referral hospitals, for 6 months, the Plan-Do-Study-Act framework for QI was implemented to identify key drivers of the following measures: having complete anthropometric evaluation documented at admission, 3 or more weight measurements per hospitalization week, documentation of nutritional therapy for eligible patients, and documentation of referral for outpatient nutritional rehabilitation after discharge. Clinical data were abstracted from hospital charts and entered into an EpiInfo database, including a 3-month observation period after the project, and analyzed retrospectively.

Results:

A total of 2,208 children from wards other than malnutrition were included in the analysis. Complete anthropometric evaluation at admission improved from 24.4% 2 months before the QI project to 80.1% during and 75.2% in the 3 months after the project (P<.001). The percentage of patients with 3 or more weight measurements per hospitalization week rose from 22.3% to 82.8% during and 75.0% after the project (P<.001). Documentation of nutritional therapy increased from 58.8% before to 67.1% during and 70.6% after the project (P=.54), and documentation of referral for outpatient nutritional rehabilitation after discharge decreased from 55.9% to 54.9% during and increased to 70.6% after the project, (P<.001).

Conclusion:

Nurse engagement may lead to important advancements in the diagnosis and treatment of acute malnutrition in pediatric wards other than malnutrition in Mozambique. Task-sharing, particularly nurse engagement, in combination with QI methodology, may be considered for wards in similar settings with a high burden of malnutrition.

Received: March 17, 2023.Accepted: November 21, 2023.Published: December 22, 2023.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly cited. To view a copy of the license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. When linking to this article, please use the following permanent link: https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00094

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