Introduction
Clinical
nutrition
is nutrition
of patients
in health care.
Clinical
in this sense refers to the management of patients, including not only
outpatients at clinics,
but also (and mainly) inpatients in hospitals. It incorporates primarily the
scientific fields of nutrition and dietetics.
It aims to keep a healthy energy balance in patients, as well as
providing sufficient amounts other nutrients such as protein, vitamins, and
minerals.
Normally,
individuals obtain the necessary nutrients their bodies require through normal
daily diets that process the foods accordingly within the body. Nevertheless,
there are circumstances such as disease, distress, stress, and so on that may
prevent the body from obtaining sufficient nutrients through diets alone. In
such conditions, a dietary supplementation specifically formulated for their
individual condition may be required to fill the void created by the specific
condition. This can come in form of Medical Nutrition.
In the field of clinical nutrition, malnutrition
has causes, epidemiology and management distinct from those associated with
malnutrition that is mainly related to poverty.
The main causes of clinical malnutrition are:
Clinical malnutrition may also be aggravated by iatrogenic
factors, i.e., the inability of a health care
entity to appropriately compensate for causes of malnutrition.
There are various definitions of clinical
malnutrition. According to one of them, patients are defined as severely undernourished when meeting
at least one of the following criteria: BMI
<
or = 20 kg/m2 and/or >
or = 5% unintentional weight loss in the past month and/or > or = 10%
unintentional weight loss in the past 6 months. By the same system, the patient
is moderately undernourished if
they met at least one of the following criteria: BMI 20.1–22 kg/m2
and/or 5-10% unintentional weight loss in the past six months.
Rationale
This course includes the Dietary
management of Different type of Diseases (weight management, cardiovascular
disease, aged care, diabetes, nutrition support, oncology, gastrointestinal
diseases, liver disease and renal disease).
Objectives
The course covers the application of
dietary modifications in the treatment, management and prevention of different
disease conditions. The unit covers the interactions between nutrition and
clinical conditions (weight management, cardiovascular disease, aged care,
diabetes, nutrition support, oncology, gastrointestinal diseases, liver disease
and renal disease).
Outcomes
Students will be able to
determine/know the techniques/procedures for Balanced Diet, Menu Planning, Diet
for Growth & Development, Diet for Kidney Diseases, RDA, Diet preparation
for Pregnancy and Lactation, Diet in Cardiovascular Diseases, Management of
Diabetes Mellitus, Importance of Breast-milk, diet in Liver Diseases etc.
Text Books & References
- Nutrition and Dietetics with Indian case studies By
Subhangini Joshi
- Human Nutrition and Dietetics By J.S. Garrow