Title of article :
Teaching medical students the subjective global assessment
Author/Authors :
Donald R. Duerksen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
3
From page :
313
To page :
315
Abstract :
OBJECTIVE: Clinical nutrition assessment is a clinical skill not taught in many medical schools in North America. The purpose of this study is to determine whether second-year medical students can be taught to perform a nutritional Subjective Global Assessment (SGA). METHODS: In this study, second-year medical students were given a didactic session and a bedside demonstration of the SGA. Subsequently, they performed an SGA on unknown patients and classified those patients into one of three categories: A) well nourished, B) moderately malnourished, or C) severely malnourished. This was compared with the assessments of clinical dietitians and a physician. RESULTS: After this instruction, medical students correctly identified malnourished individuals. They were less accurate in their subclassification between mildly and severely malnourished individuals. The degree of agreement with clinical dietitians and a physician was fair (κ = 0.34). CONCLUSIONS: With a multidisciplinary team of physicians and clinical dietitians, medical students can be taught the SGA in a 3h format. This is an important clinical skill that emphasizes the importance of clinical nutrition and may help identify malnourished individuals early in the course of their hospitalization.
Keywords :
Nutrition education , Nutritional assessment , subjective global assessment
Journal title :
Nutrition
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
Nutrition
Record number :
717709
Link To Document :
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