Abstract

ABSTRACTIn low- and middle-income countries, nutrition support strategies are often suboptimal or non-existent in hospital settings. This is further compounded by high rates of malnutrition in these countries. The first four dietitians graduated in Malawi in 2017 providing a new opportunity to build capacity to introduce nutrition support in an acute care setting. A paediatric nutrition support program was implemented at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital (QECH) in Blantyre, Malawi including the hiring of a local dietitian. This capacity building paper explains the development and introduction of the nutrition support program including a description of perceptions of health professionals at QECH working alongside the dietitian. In the first four months of the program at QECH, the dietitian provided nutrition support to 183 different patients across paediatric wards. Nutritional interventions predominantly included infant formula and breastmilk fortification, provision of therapeutic feeds orally or via nasogastric tubes, increased dietary protein intake for children identified to be at high risk, and nutritional counselling to caregivers. More complex nutritional interventions were also given such as the insertion of gastrostomy tubes to deliver nutrition directly to the stomach. Following the introduction of the program, qualitative interviews were done with health professionals at QECH including nurses (n = 5) and physicians (n = 11). All participants emphasized the importance and impact of the nutrition support program in enhancing the care of hospitalized children, therefore improving outcomes such as tolerability of clinical interventions, decreased duration of stay, and reduced risk of hospital readmission. In conclusion, there is a need for nutrition support provided by a dietitian for different paediatric patients which was corroborated by positive feedback from health professionals at QECH. Integration of dietitians into the healthcare system by respective Ministries of Health will require advocacy around the potential for nutrition support to strengthen the quality of care of vulnerable children.A Chichewa abstract for this paper is available in a supplementary file.

Highlights

  • Achieving universal health coverage is a major objective of the World Health Organization (WHO) [1]

  • Poor nutritional status is associated with inpatient and post-discharge morbidity and mortality, yet nutrition support for these children is extremely limited with few qualified individuals to provide nutritional interventions in low-resource settings like Malawi [7,8,9,10,11]

  • One of the dietitians was recruited to work in the Department of Paediatrics at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital (QECH) in Blantyre, Malawi. In this capacity building paper, we describe the introduction of a clinical nutrition support program at QECH, led by a newlytrained local dietitian entering the health workforce

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Summary

Background

Achieving universal health coverage is a major objective of the World Health Organization (WHO) [1]. Additional qualitative interviews with health professionals involved in the care of critically ill patient at QECH and another tertiary hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi have indicated that training and protocols around nutrition support, apart from protocols on severe acute malnutrition (SAM), are lacking and there are few qualified individuals to lead nutrition support including clinical nutritionists and dietitians [9]. These findings suggest that there is a gap in providing nutrition support for paediatric patients within this low-resource hospital setting. Successful implementation will require resource allocation for feeds and other supplies for nutrition support, anthropometry equipment, and training of other health professionals as part of nutrition support teams

Conclusions
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