Monitoring and evaluation: making your work count
Dr Liz Weekes
Consultant Dietitian & NIHR Clinical Lecturer
Department of Nutrition & Dietetics
Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and
King’s College, London
Why monitor and evaluate?
• To demonstrate a measurable impact on service users and their carers
• To demonstrate a measurable benefit for service providers
• To provide robust evidence to Clinical Commissioning Groups and Health & Well Being Boards commission services
MTF fifth principle – Monitoring and evaluation
• Practical ideas to measure the impact of your interventions and individual outcomes
• Lambeth and Southwark Action on Malnutrition Project (LAMP)
• Two year project funded by Guy’s & St Thomas’ Charity
Phase 1 – Mapping and scoping (April 13 - March 14)
Phase 2 – Model development (April 14 – March 15)
• Using BAPEN Toolkit and MTF Five Principles as a framework
LAMP (April 2013 – March 2014)
1. Audit compliance with national nutritional care guidelines in
– Care homes
– Intermediate care
– Community mental health
2. Map current service provision and associated costs (acute and community)
3. Establish the extent of malnutrition across community care settings and assess its impact on health and social care costs
4. Identify and test nutritional care pathways
Audit compliance with nutritional care guidelines
• Audit of documentation relating to nutrition screening, nutrition care plans, monitoring and onward referral if required (+ training and policies)
• Compare with national guidelines i.e. Essence of Care, NICE (2006)
1. Care home audit
• 19 care homes audited
• N = 722 residents
• Mean age 83 years (range 35 to 105)
• Mean length of stay 3.37 years (range 1 week to 27 years)
• Documented nutrition risk assessment in 417 (83 %) but……..
2. Currently auditing:
• Mental Health
• Intermediate Care
Page 5
Map current service provision
Focus groups
• 12 completed (including dietitians, OPALs, district nurses, intermediate care, GPs, practice nurses, OTs and physiotherapists)
• 72 staff and 43 citizens (12 % of population approached)
• Exploring current practice around screening, assessment and management, referral methods, communications and networking
• Currently analysing results
Page 6
Census data2011
5 % BMI < 20 kg/m2a
Aged > 65 years
14 % at riskb
Living in care homes
40 % at riskc
Lambeth(303,100)
Southwark(288,300)
16,975
16,145
22,976
22,329
3,191
3,126
1,365
791
546
316
33,120 45,305 6,317 2,156 862
Population at risk across Lambeth & Southwark Page 7
Sources: aElia & Russell 2009, bElia & Stratton 2005, cBAPEN 2011
• No current data on people receiving care at home, intermediate care or GP practices
• Plan to undertake a cohort study in 350 subjects to determine the risk of malnutrition in each of these settings
• To quantify the extent of malnutrition in community settings across LSL
• To determine the health (and social care) costs associated with malnutrition
• To determine the impact of malnutrition on quality of life
Population at risk across Lambeth & Southwark Page 8
Next steps
• Analysis of food and drink provision in care homes
• Mealtime observations in care homes
• Quality of transfer documentation i.e. audit of compliance with LPP guidelines
• Training needs assessment for health and social care staff
• Health economic analysis and economic modelling
Page 9
Dr Liz Weekes – Consultant Dietitian and Project Lead
Dr Kattya Mayre-Chilton – Research Dietitian
Ms Kate Ryan – Research Dietitian
Ms Stephanie Thompson –Research Administrator
Department of Nutrition & Dietetics
Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust
Westminster Bridge Road
London SE1 7EH
Tel: 0207 188 0286 (LAMP)
LAMP is supported by The Guy’s & St Thomas’ Charity, The Lambeth Strategic Commissioning Management Team & The Southwark Commissioning Team