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Trajectories of nutritional risk: The Manitoba follow-up study
by
Tate, R.B.
, Lengyel, Christina O.
, Jiang, D.
in
Aged, 80 and over
/ Aging
/ Appetite
/ Body Weight
/ Cause of Death
/ Diet
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Food programs
/ Geriatric Assessment
/ Geriatrics/Gerontology
/ health care workers
/ Health risk assessment
/ Health Status
/ Humans
/ ingestion
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Longitudinal study
/ Male
/ males
/ Malnutrition - diagnosis
/ Malnutrition - etiology
/ Manitoba
/ meat
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ men
/ Mens health
/ Mental Health
/ mortality
/ Neurosciences
/ Nutrition
/ Nutrition Assessment
/ nutrition education
/ nutritional risk
/ Nutritional Status
/ Primary Care Medicine
/ Prospective Studies
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Risk
/ Social Environment
/ Social Isolation
/ Survival analysis
/ survival rate
/ trajectories
/ vegetables
2017
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Trajectories of nutritional risk: The Manitoba follow-up study
by
Tate, R.B.
, Lengyel, Christina O.
, Jiang, D.
in
Aged, 80 and over
/ Aging
/ Appetite
/ Body Weight
/ Cause of Death
/ Diet
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Food programs
/ Geriatric Assessment
/ Geriatrics/Gerontology
/ health care workers
/ Health risk assessment
/ Health Status
/ Humans
/ ingestion
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Longitudinal study
/ Male
/ males
/ Malnutrition - diagnosis
/ Malnutrition - etiology
/ Manitoba
/ meat
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ men
/ Mens health
/ Mental Health
/ mortality
/ Neurosciences
/ Nutrition
/ Nutrition Assessment
/ nutrition education
/ nutritional risk
/ Nutritional Status
/ Primary Care Medicine
/ Prospective Studies
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Risk
/ Social Environment
/ Social Isolation
/ Survival analysis
/ survival rate
/ trajectories
/ vegetables
2017
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Trajectories of nutritional risk: The Manitoba follow-up study
by
Tate, R.B.
, Lengyel, Christina O.
, Jiang, D.
in
Aged, 80 and over
/ Aging
/ Appetite
/ Body Weight
/ Cause of Death
/ Diet
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Food programs
/ Geriatric Assessment
/ Geriatrics/Gerontology
/ health care workers
/ Health risk assessment
/ Health Status
/ Humans
/ ingestion
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Longitudinal study
/ Male
/ males
/ Malnutrition - diagnosis
/ Malnutrition - etiology
/ Manitoba
/ meat
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ men
/ Mens health
/ Mental Health
/ mortality
/ Neurosciences
/ Nutrition
/ Nutrition Assessment
/ nutrition education
/ nutritional risk
/ Nutritional Status
/ Primary Care Medicine
/ Prospective Studies
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Risk
/ Social Environment
/ Social Isolation
/ Survival analysis
/ survival rate
/ trajectories
/ vegetables
2017
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Trajectories of nutritional risk: The Manitoba follow-up study
Journal Article
Trajectories of nutritional risk: The Manitoba follow-up study
2017
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Overview
To identify patterns of nutritional risk among older men over a four-year period and to project their survival rates over the next two and a half years.
A prospective longitudinal study.
Canada.
Three hundred and thirty-six male survivors of the Manitoba Follow-up Study (MFUS) cohort with an average age of 90 years in 2011.
Four years of nutritional risk SCREEN II scores (five waves) from the male survivors of the MFUS cohort. The semi-parametric group-based trajectory approach and survival analysis were used to investigate the trajectories of nutritional risk.
Of the participants, 30% lived alone. Five distinct developmental trajectory groups for nutritional risk score were identified. Significant statistical differences were found among the five trajectory groups for SF-36 mental health (p=.02), SF-36 physical health (p=<.001), perception of aging successfully (p=.04) and living alone (p=<.001). Among the five groups, the most pairwise differences were found in appetite, intake of meat and alternatives, and vegetables and fruit, weight change, skipping meals and eating with others. Men in the poorest nutritional risk trajectory group were two times more likely to die within a 2 1/2 year period compared to men in the best nutritional risk trajectory group (hazard rate = 2.33, p=.07).
Distinct nutritional risk trajectories were found for older men over a four year period. Poor nutritional risk trajectories are associated with higher risk of mortality for very old men over a short period of time. Timely nutritional assessments by health professionals are needed to identify older men at nutritional risk. Subsequent nutrition education and follow-up may be important in preventing further decline.
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