Dietary protein intake may reduce hospitalisation due to infection in Māori of advanced age: LiLACS NZ
Version 3 2024-06-17, 14:47Version 3 2024-06-17, 14:47
Version 2 2024-06-06, 07:03Version 2 2024-06-06, 07:03
Version 1 2015-09-07, 12:33Version 1 2015-09-07, 12:33
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 14:47authored byC Wham, F Baggett, R Teh, S Moyes, M Kēpa, M Connolly, Santosh JatranaSantosh Jatrana, N Kerse
OBJECTIVE: To investigate factors related to hospital admission for infection, specifically examining nutrient intakes of Māori in advanced age (80+ years). METHOD: Face-to-face interviews with 200 Māori (85 men) to obtain demographic, social and health information. Diagnoses were validated against medical records. Detailed nutritional assessment using the 24-hour multiple-pass recall method was collected on two separate days. FOODfiles was used to analyse nutrient intake. National Health Index (NHI) numbers were matched to hospitalisations over a two-year period (12 months prior and 12 months following dietary assessment). Selected International Classification of Disease (ICD) codes were used to identify admissions related to infection. RESULTS: A total of 18% of participants were hospitalised due to infection, most commonly lower respiratory tract infection. Controlling for age, gender, NZ deprivation index, diabetes, CVD and chronic lung disease, a lower energy-adjusted protein intake was independently associated with hospitalisation due to infection: OR (95%CI) 1.14 (1.00-1.29), p=0.046. CONCLUSIONS: Protein intake may have a protective effect on the nutrition-related morbidity of older Māori. Improving dietary protein intake is a simple strategy for dietary modification aiming to decrease the risk of infections that lead to hospitalisation and other morbidities.
History
Journal
Australian and New Zealand journal of public health