Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study. / Mortensen, Charlotte; Tetens, Inge; Kristensen, Michael; Snitkjær, Pia; Beck, Anne Marie.

In: B M C Geriatrics, Vol. 22, 27, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Mortensen, C, Tetens, I, Kristensen, M, Snitkjær, P & Beck, AM 2022, 'Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study', B M C Geriatrics, vol. 22, 27. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02719-4

APA

Mortensen, C., Tetens, I., Kristensen, M., Snitkjær, P., & Beck, A. M. (2022). Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study. B M C Geriatrics, 22, [27]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02719-4

Vancouver

Mortensen C, Tetens I, Kristensen M, Snitkjær P, Beck AM. Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study. B M C Geriatrics. 2022;22. 27. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02719-4

Author

Mortensen, Charlotte ; Tetens, Inge ; Kristensen, Michael ; Snitkjær, Pia ; Beck, Anne Marie. / Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study. In: B M C Geriatrics. 2022 ; Vol. 22.

Bibtex

@article{a007c225759b452db48115a1f5d29c68,
title = "Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study",
abstract = "Background: Nursing home residents are in high risk of vitamin D deficiency, which negatively affects bone health. Vitamin D and calcium supplements haves shown to increase bone density and reduce fracture risk. Therefore, The Danish Health Authority recommends all nursing home residents a daily supplement of 20 μg vitamin D and 800-1000 mg calcium. However, adherence to the recommendation and knowledge of it is unknown. The aims of this study were to investigate adherence, knowledge, and potential barriers to this recommendation in Denmark.Methods: A cross-sectional electronic survey was conducted in May-June 2020 among 50 randomly selected nursing homes widely distributed in Denmark. Questions included degree of adherence to the recommendation at each nursing home as well as respondent's knowledge and attitudes towards it, and experienced barriers in relation to adherence.Results: Respondents from 41 nursing homes answered the questionnaire, and these were mainly nurses (63%) or nursing home leaders (20%). Low adherence (≤ 40% of residents receiving both supplements) was reported at 35% of nursing homes, and only 8% of the nursing homes had a high adherence (> 80% of residents receiving both supplements). Most respondents (88%) had knowledge of the recommendation and 62% rated importance of increased implementation as high. Common explanations of low implementation were a lack of prescription by the general practitioner in the central electronic database (60%), resident-refusal to eat tablets (43%), chewing-swallowing difficulties (40%), and a high number of tablets given to the residents daily (34%).Conclusions: The recommendation of daily vitamin D and calcium supplements to Danish nursing home residents is poorly implemented even though knowledge of the recommendation is relatively high. Barriers relate to an ambiguity of responsibility between the general practitioners and the nursing home staff, as well as the high number of tablets to be consumed in total by the residents. These barriers must be targeted to improve adherence in this vulnerable group of institutionalized older adults.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Vitamin D, Calcium, Tablets, Nursing homes, Aged, Supplementation, Recommendation, implementation, Adherence",
author = "Charlotte Mortensen and Inge Tetens and Michael Kristensen and Pia Snitkj{\ae}r and Beck, {Anne Marie}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2022. The Author(s).",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1186/s12877-021-02719-4",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
journal = "B M C Geriatrics",
issn = "1471-2318",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Adherence and barriers to the vitamin D and calcium supplement recommendation at Danish nursing homes: a cross-sectional study

AU - Mortensen, Charlotte

AU - Tetens, Inge

AU - Kristensen, Michael

AU - Snitkjær, Pia

AU - Beck, Anne Marie

N1 - © 2022. The Author(s).

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Background: Nursing home residents are in high risk of vitamin D deficiency, which negatively affects bone health. Vitamin D and calcium supplements haves shown to increase bone density and reduce fracture risk. Therefore, The Danish Health Authority recommends all nursing home residents a daily supplement of 20 μg vitamin D and 800-1000 mg calcium. However, adherence to the recommendation and knowledge of it is unknown. The aims of this study were to investigate adherence, knowledge, and potential barriers to this recommendation in Denmark.Methods: A cross-sectional electronic survey was conducted in May-June 2020 among 50 randomly selected nursing homes widely distributed in Denmark. Questions included degree of adherence to the recommendation at each nursing home as well as respondent's knowledge and attitudes towards it, and experienced barriers in relation to adherence.Results: Respondents from 41 nursing homes answered the questionnaire, and these were mainly nurses (63%) or nursing home leaders (20%). Low adherence (≤ 40% of residents receiving both supplements) was reported at 35% of nursing homes, and only 8% of the nursing homes had a high adherence (> 80% of residents receiving both supplements). Most respondents (88%) had knowledge of the recommendation and 62% rated importance of increased implementation as high. Common explanations of low implementation were a lack of prescription by the general practitioner in the central electronic database (60%), resident-refusal to eat tablets (43%), chewing-swallowing difficulties (40%), and a high number of tablets given to the residents daily (34%).Conclusions: The recommendation of daily vitamin D and calcium supplements to Danish nursing home residents is poorly implemented even though knowledge of the recommendation is relatively high. Barriers relate to an ambiguity of responsibility between the general practitioners and the nursing home staff, as well as the high number of tablets to be consumed in total by the residents. These barriers must be targeted to improve adherence in this vulnerable group of institutionalized older adults.

AB - Background: Nursing home residents are in high risk of vitamin D deficiency, which negatively affects bone health. Vitamin D and calcium supplements haves shown to increase bone density and reduce fracture risk. Therefore, The Danish Health Authority recommends all nursing home residents a daily supplement of 20 μg vitamin D and 800-1000 mg calcium. However, adherence to the recommendation and knowledge of it is unknown. The aims of this study were to investigate adherence, knowledge, and potential barriers to this recommendation in Denmark.Methods: A cross-sectional electronic survey was conducted in May-June 2020 among 50 randomly selected nursing homes widely distributed in Denmark. Questions included degree of adherence to the recommendation at each nursing home as well as respondent's knowledge and attitudes towards it, and experienced barriers in relation to adherence.Results: Respondents from 41 nursing homes answered the questionnaire, and these were mainly nurses (63%) or nursing home leaders (20%). Low adherence (≤ 40% of residents receiving both supplements) was reported at 35% of nursing homes, and only 8% of the nursing homes had a high adherence (> 80% of residents receiving both supplements). Most respondents (88%) had knowledge of the recommendation and 62% rated importance of increased implementation as high. Common explanations of low implementation were a lack of prescription by the general practitioner in the central electronic database (60%), resident-refusal to eat tablets (43%), chewing-swallowing difficulties (40%), and a high number of tablets given to the residents daily (34%).Conclusions: The recommendation of daily vitamin D and calcium supplements to Danish nursing home residents is poorly implemented even though knowledge of the recommendation is relatively high. Barriers relate to an ambiguity of responsibility between the general practitioners and the nursing home staff, as well as the high number of tablets to be consumed in total by the residents. These barriers must be targeted to improve adherence in this vulnerable group of institutionalized older adults.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Vitamin D

KW - Calcium

KW - Tablets

KW - Nursing homes

KW - Aged

KW - Supplementation

KW - Recommendation

KW - implementation

KW - Adherence

U2 - 10.1186/s12877-021-02719-4

DO - 10.1186/s12877-021-02719-4

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34991498

VL - 22

JO - B M C Geriatrics

JF - B M C Geriatrics

SN - 1471-2318

M1 - 27

ER -

ID: 289164593