Aim: To evaluate the nutritional status of hospitalized children in Belgian hospitals and to analyse the impact of undernutrition on the degree of weight loss and duration of hospitalization.
Methods: In each hospital (one tertiary and three secondary hospitals), 100 consecutively hospitalized children were eligible for inclusion. Of these, 379 were included for analysis. Body weight, length and mid-upper arm circumference were measured at admission and body weight also at discharge.
Results: The median (range) age was 2.1 (0.8-17) years. On admission, 29 (7.7%) children were chronically malnourished and, depending on the parameter, between 2.4% and 9.8% acutely undernourished, while 12.1% had at least one subnormal parameter. Median (range) duration of hospitalization was four (1-64) days. Median (range) weight change was 0.0% (-15.6% - +13.9%). Weight loss of >2% was significantly (p < 0.05) more prevalent in tertiary (20.0%) than in secondary (10.2%) hospitals. Median hospital duration was 50% longer for chronically malnourished children (6.0 vs 4.0 days; p < 0.01). Only 36 children received a nutritional intervention.
Conclusion: Acute undernutrition and chronic undernutrition remain frequent findings in hospitalized children in Belgium. Children with chronic undernutrition had a 50% longer hospital stay. Hospital-related undernutrition is an often unrecognized problem, because only one-third of the acutely malnourished children received nutritional support.
Keywords: Child; Hospital; Malnutrition; Nutritional status; Undernutrition.
©2013 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.