Iddsi Clinical-2 1
Iddsi Clinical-2 1
Iddsi Clinical-2 1
1/29/18
Introduction.
Some companies that have become the gold standard for standardization are McDonalds,
Ford, and Volvo. These companies are not health care companies, but every business shares the
common goal of providing a great product and in this case, care to patients. The International
Dysphagia Diet Standardisation Initiative (IDDSI) strives to make diets in every hospital the
same, by placing guidelines for specific diets to cater to all ages, care settings, and cultures.
Implementation as recommended by the authors of the IDDSI framework is best done over the
course of 2-3 years using the MAPA model (Monitor-Aware-Prepare-Adopt). IDDSI is like the
National Dysphagia Diet (NDD), which was brought to fruition in the 1990’s in the attempt to
decrease the amount of confusion in communication between all health care providers and their
patients (Zwiefelhofer). IDDSI is to be fully implemented in the United States at some point, and
other countries Canada and Australia have already fully implemented the IDDSI framework.
Patients being treated for psychiatric conditions tend to refuse medical care and this
to fully implement the IDDSI framework by October of 2019. Currently patients refuse
therapeutic diets even when the benefit of diet change is clearly explained. Those patients that
have already agreed to be on a therapeutic diet will have to accept a new therapeutic diet under
the IDDSI guidelines that is not as lenient as the current diet under the NDD guidelines. The
problem is transitioning from NDD to IDDSI a patient may no longer be served food items
outside of their given diet guidelines. The reason why NDD is so lenient with the specifications
for diets is no official measurement technique exists to place food in NDD1, NDD2, or NDD3.
The issue DSH-P and other hospitals face, is if a patient refuses the diet and then chokes this
causes legal problems for the hospital. However, DSH-P must under California Code of
Regulations respect the patient's right to “refuse any treatment” this includes diets.
Background
Patients can refuse any treatment, this puts the patient at risk and staff as well. Belcher et
al. (2017) evaluated if people with mental illness should be awarded the right to refuse treatment.
The argument is the state should have the right to stop mentally ill patients from making bad
choices. However, this is not the case and other approaches such as patient centered treatment is
an option. Patient centered treatment, is the practice of divulging all the risks associated with not
complying to treatment and letting the patient express feelings on the decision. This approach
improves trust between the medical professional and the patient, in turn improving patient
satisfaction and adherence to treatment. Mental Health America (MHA) recognizes that the
patients with mental health problems should be able to make decisions regarding their treatment
and that the best hope for recovery comes from the access to voluntary mental health treatment.
MHA deems involuntary treatment as a last resort, limited to when a person is a danger to self or
others. This makes recommendations for involuntary medication orders difficult regarding diet.
Principles that may be used to place somebody on medication without their consent include
risk of physical harm to themselves or others, least restrictive alternative, procedural protections,
should be truly voluntary, and advance directives. There is no current policy for refusal of diets
Method
An assessment of all diet orders in computrition was conducted. To evaluate diet orders
each patient was looked at individually in computrition. Their diet order was then compared to
the IDDSI framework guidelines. If a patient was on a NDDI diet their diet was compared to
IDDSI Puree, if on a NDDII diet or Mechanical Soft (MS) diet their diet was compared to
Minced and Moist, and if on a NDDIII diet their diet was compared to Soft and Bite Sized.
Results
There were only two diet orders out of 71 texture modified diets that do not fit within the IDDSI
diet guidelines. One person is located on unit 23 and is receiving (NDDII w/puree vegetable,
regular bread at meals not soaked not cubed) when transitioned to IDDSI Minced and Moist the
snack and hard cooked eggs) oranges and hard cooked egg do not fit within the Minced and
Moist guidelines.
Recommendations
Patient centered treatment should be the first approach when introducing to a patient that
they need a texture modified diet. Going over in detail what the diet entails and telling them
about the risks to not receiving that diet (Belcher et al. 2017). If a patient is to choke on a regular
diet after being educated on diet modification, documentation should be done. Once enough
documentation is done to support the medical teams claim that the patient needs to be on a
texture modified diet because the regular diet is a danger to self, steps can be taken to allocate an
involuntary treatment order otherwise known as a probate. Probate can be used for diet
prescriptions. One example at DSH-P, a patient standing at 77 inches tall and weighing 400 lbs.
has history of falling. The problem was he could not be transported if he were to fall because the
gurney and most people would not be able to lift him. The doctor was able to get a probate to
place the patient on a low-calorie diet and restrict snacking for weight loss. The probate was
applicable because if the patient could not be transported due to weight his weight became a
danger to self.
The diet orders assessed need to be altered to fit within the IDDSI guidelines. If a patient
has a diagnosis of dysphagia or history of choking, placing them on a diet that falls under the
IDDSI framework would be the best option. If a patient is just edentulous there is no obligation
to place this person on a dysphagia diet (IDDSI). Involving the patient in altering their diet order
would be best. For the patient on unit 23 who is on a NDDII w/puree vegetable, regular bread at
meals not soaked not cubed diet, the best option would be to place him on Soft and Bite Sized
diet, puree his vegetables, and request a speech language pathologist to evaluate the patient and
clear the patient to consume dry bread cut into 1.5 cm pieces. The patient on unit 05 who is on a
NDDII diet with fruit as a snack and hard cooked egg can be placed on minced and moist level 5
of the IDDSI framework, however the fruit must be pureed, and the eggs must be scrambled.
Conclusion
This project found implementing IDDSI at DSH-P will be feasible and only two patient
diet orders pose any difficulty. Further investigation into the feasibility is not warranted because
not many issues were found in this initial analysis of diets. Future diet orders until the
implementation of IDDSI should be conservative, not offering patients food items that do not fit
within the IDDSI guidelines for that specific diet. This will reduce the amount of resistance from
Totals 59 6 3 3 71
References
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Mental Health America. Position Statement 22: Involuntary Mental Health treatment.
http://iddsi.org/framework/
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