Thursday, August 21, 2014
A
landmark
study
aimed
at
improving
the
food
intake,
health
and
quality
of
life
of
older
adults
in
long-term
care
homes
is
among
three
projects
at
the
University
of
Waterloo
receiving
close
to
$1.5
million
in
grants
from
the
Canadian
Institutes
of
Health
Research
(CIHR).
“We know that food intake in long-term care tends to be poor, and that residents have poor nutrition as a result. But what we don’t know is why,” said Professor Keller. “Is the food unappealing? Is the setting institutional? Are residents having physical trouble eating?”
To conduct the complex study, teams of researchers will monitor the food intake patterns of 800 randomly selected residents in 32 long-term care homes located in four different provinces. The pioneering project will evaluate how factors like meal quality, food access and mealtime experience impact food consumption.
“It’s not just one thing impacting food intake. If we can understand broadly what is happening, what are the big deterrents to food intake, we can successfully intervene on a large scale,” said Professor Keller. “Poor food intake is both preventable and treatable.”
The study’s findings are expected to help optimize health-care practices and enhance the quality of life of Canada’s aging population.