A. Karlsson et G. Nordstrom, Nutritional status, symptoms experienced and general state of health in HIV-infected patients, J CLIN NURS, 10(5), 2001, pp. 609-617
The aim of the study was to describe HIV-infected patients with respect to
nutritional status, symptoms experienced, general state of health, and rele
vant medical and laboratory data. An additional aim was to study the relati
onships between some of these variables.
On admission to an acute care hospital in Sweden, 25 HIV-positive men were
consecutively included in the study. Medical data, anthropometric variables
such as weight, height, body mass index (BMI) and percentage weight loss w
ere studied.
The following instruments were used: the subjective global assessment (SGA)
was used to determine nutritional status; the oral assessment guide (OAG)
was used for subjective assessment of the oral cavity; and the numeric rati
ng scale (NRS) was used to assess the symptoms experienced. The Health Inde
x (HI) was used to evaluate general state of health.
The results showed that more than half of the patients had suspected/severe
malnutrition; between 48% and 72% complained of moderate to severe symptom
s of various kinds. Two thirds felt their general state of health was rathe
r poor or very poor.
Correlations showed that the lower the BMI, the worse the nutritional statu
s (SGA); the greater the weight loss in percent, the worse the nutritional
status (SGA); and the worse the general state of health (HI), the worse the
nutritional status (SGA).
In conclusion, it is important that nurses have good knowledge concerning n
utritional problems in order to be able to detect these conditions at an ea
rly stage and/or to endeavour to prevent them.