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Nursing Manual
Fatal Four
Topic: Aspiration
In persons with developmental disabilities,
common issues that place a person at risk for aspiration include:
- Decreased or absent protective
airway reflexes such as occur in cerebral palsy.
- Poor or underdeveloped oral motor
skills that do not permit adequate chewing or swallowing.
- Gastroesophogeal reflux disorder
(GERD) which may cause aspiration of refluxed stomach contents.
- Epileptic seizures.
- Poor self-eating skills (food
stuffing, rapid eating).
- Inappropriate fluid consistency
and/or food textures.
- Inadequately trained staff assisting
persons with eating (poor assisted eating technique and allowing poor positioning).
- Medication side effects which
decrease/relax voluntary muscles causing delayed swallowing or suppression
of protective reflexes of gagging and coughing.
- Impaired mobility may leave persons
unable to properly position themselves for adequate swallowing.
Nursing assessment
(Includes Record Review/History, Assessment and Staff Interview)
Record Review/History
- Diagnosis of conditions such
as cerebral palsy, epilepsy, GERD, dysphasia or hiatal hernia
- History of aspiration pneumonia
- Assisted by staff with eating
or drinking
- History of choking, coughing,
gagging while eating
- Modified food texture and fluid
consistency
- Eating/swallowing evaluations
and laboratory tests (barium swallow, pH study, etc.)
- Unexplained weight loss
- Taking medications that may decrease
voluntary muscle coordination or cause decreased alertness
- Unsafe eating and drinking habits
due to mental illness or behavior disorder
Assessment
Oral Pharyngeal
- Gagging, choking, coughing with
or shortly after meals
- Drooling
- Food falls out while eating
Gastrointestinal
- Forceful ejection of food during
swallow
- Smells of vomit or food after
a meal
- Frequent emesis
Musculo/skeletal
- Positioning during meals, trunk,
neck, head in proper alignment
- Positioning after meals in an
upright position
Respiratory
- Elevated body temperature
- Abnormal lung sounds
- Rapid or labored respirations
- Wet respirations at mealtime
Psycho/Social
- Rapid eating, food stuffing,
water seeking
- Impulsivity, distractibility
at meals
Staff interview
- Reports of coughing, choking,
gagging while or immediately after eating
- Reports that the individual will
only eat for one or two special staff
- Reports that the individual takes
unusually long to eat a meal
- Reports of meal refusals
Heath Care Plan/Nursing Care Plan
- Is based on a professional assessment
of the person's health care
- Identifies:
- Measurable and appropriate
goals
- Specific interventions
- By whom and how frequently
data will be monitored
- Refers to an individualized aspiration
protocol that contains:
- Risk factors for aspiration
specific to the person.
- Prevention strategies
- Signs and symptoms of aspiration
- Interventions
- Reminders for the staff
to call 911 if they believe the person appears gravely ill or they
are concerned about their immediate health and safety.
Goals
- Respiratory rate within normal
limits
- Breath sounds normal
- No instances of gagging, coughing,
choking with eating
- No aspiration pneumonia
- No evidence of chronic lung changes
on chest x-ray
Interventions
- Written plan for feeding or assisting
person
- Food texture and liquid consistency
per physician orders
- Liquid consistency with tooth
brushing or administering medications
- Proper positioning during and
after meals
- Swallowing evaluation as indicated/ordered
- Only trained staff to assist
with eating
- Stop eating/assisting if person
coughs, chokes or gags until improved
- Offer more frequent but smaller
meals
- Slow pace of eating and decrease
size of bites
- Avoid supine position after meals
(best upright 30 minutes after eating)
- Head of bed elevated per orders
(for individuals with GERD)
- Avoid food/fluid before bedtime
- Breath sounds assessment by nurse
Evaluation
- Analysis and review of interventions
- Review of person's and staff's
training needs
- Review and continue to monitor
person's response
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