Social:Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia Scale

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Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia Scale
Medical diagnostics
Purposeused to assess feeding difficulty in older people with dementia

The Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia (EdFED) Scale is a psychometric screening tool to assess difficulty with self-feeding in older people with dementia. It was developed at The University of Edinburgh by Roger Watson and Ian Deary.

The original EdFED was composed of 11 items and was validated using Guttman scaling[1] but a subsequent version was validated using Mokken scaling and was composed of only ten items.[2] The scale measures aspects of the level of intervention required by carers (for example, verbal prompting), observations related to feeding (for example, spillage) and behavioural aspects (for example, refusal to eat). The items are scored on a three-point Likert type scale from ‘0’ (never) to ‘3’ (often) observed items on the scale. In 2014 Alzheimers Disease International highlighted the utility of the EdFED in their ‘’’Nutrition and Dementia’’’ report.[3]

The EdFED has been translated and validated in several languages including Chinese (Taiwanese and Mainland)[4][5] and Italian.[6] The scale was used as an outcome measure of the first randomised controlled trial of an intervention to alleviate feeding difficulty[7] and has been used as an outcome measure in a national study of feeding difficulty in older people with dementia in Canada;[8] In this study it was shown that a 1-unit change in the EdFED score is equivalent to a loss of 63 kilocalories and 3 grams of protein per day.

References

  1. Watson, R (1994). "Measuring feeding difficulty in patients with dementia: developing a scale". Journal of Advanced Nursing (Wiley) 19: 257-263. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2648.1994.tb01079.x. PMID 8188956. 
  2. Watson, R (1996). "Mokken scaling procedure (MSP) applied to feeding difficulty in elderly people with dementia". International Journal of Nursing Studies (Elsevier) 33: 385-393. doi:10.1016/0020-7489(95)00058-5. PMID 8836763. 
  3. "Nutrition and Dementia". Alzheimers Disease International. https://www.alz.co.uk/nutrition-report. 
  4. Lin, L-C; Watson, R; Lee, Y-C; Chou, Y-C; Wu, S-C (2008). "Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia (EdFED) scale: cross-cultural validation of the Chinese version". Journal of Advanced Nursing (Wiley) 62: 116-123. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2648.2008.04596.x. PMID 18352970. 
  5. Liu, w; Watson, R; Lou, F-L (2014). "The Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia scale (EdFED): cross‐cultural validation of the simplified Chinese version in mainland China". Journal of Clinical Nursing (Wiley) 23: 45-53. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2702.2012.04250.x. PMID 23387397. 
  6. Bagnasco, A; Watson, R; Zanini, M; Rosa, F; Rocco, G; Sasso, L (2008). "Preliminary testing using Mokken scaling of an Italian version of the Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia (EdFED-It) scale". Applied Nursing Research (Elsevier) 28: 391-396. doi:10.1016/j.apnr.2015.02.003. PMID 6608444. 
  7. Lin, L-C; Huang, Y-J; Su, S-G; Watson, R; Tsai, BW-J; Wu, S-C (2010). "Using spaced retrieval and Montessori-based activities in improving eating ability for residents with dementia". International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry (Elsevier) 28: 953-959. doi:10.1002/gps.2433. PMID 20054841. 
  8. Keller, HH; Carrier, N; Slaughter, SE; Lengyel, C; Steele, CM; Duzier, L; Morrison, J; Brown, KS et al. (2010). "Prevalence and determinants of poor food intake of residents living in long-term care". Journal of the American Medical Directors Association (Elsevier) 28: 953-959. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2017.05.003. PMID 28668663.