Healthful
Munchiesk for Happy Residents
Today’s Dietitian
By Becky Dorner, RD, LD
Vol. 6 No. 6 p. 42
Approximately 15 years ago, the administrator of
a large skilled nursing facility I consulted to came to me about
our “supplement situation.” To put it kindly, he was
unhappy about the rising cost of supplements. I began to investigate
and what I found was shocking. Over time, as a team of well-meaning
professionals, we had requested and/or ordered an extreme number
of supplements—and many of those supplements were literally
going down the drain. It was time to make some major changes. If
you can relate at all to this story, you will appreciate some great
ideas for being more effective with nutrition interventions while
jazzing things up for your residents.
Make Eating an Anticipated Experience
Eating is a social time for fun and gathering with friends. Eating
involves emotional decisions—choosing the food you really
feel like eating at the time.
Do you like to snack between meals? I know I do, and so do many
of the older adults in our care. Snacks are a great way to provide
some of the extra calories, protein, and other nutrients many of
our residents need.
Focus on Food First
Offer appealing foods that are enjoyable and also help meet the
nutrient needs of each individual. Make snack time less institutionalized,
scheduled, and mundane. This can be achieved by offering a variety
of choices in snacks. Allow residents to choose what they feel like
eating at the time the snack is offered.
Instead of adding extra foods and supplements, choose
foods residents enjoy most and enhance them by adding calories and
protein. Boost calories with margarine, mayonnaise, sour cream,
or whipped cream. Boost protein with cream, milk, cheese, peanut
butter, yogurt, cottage cheese, or powdered milk.
Enhance the foods residents like most:
• super cereal for breakfast;
• fortified soup, mashed potatoes, or high-calorie/high-protein
casseroles at lunch or dinner; and
• power pudding for dessert or snack.
Snack Carts
Remember when you were a kid and you looked forward to the ice cream
man coming down your street every night? Or when you were in the
hospital and the candy striper came by with the cart full of goodies
(eg, snacks, magazines, newspapers)? Why not create a similar feeling
for your residents?
Decorate a cart with a canopy or an umbrella to
make it look festive. Make snack time an event residents look forward
to every day by playing music and having positive energy while passing
snacks with a smile. Offer newsletters, newspapers, activity announcements,
or information fact sheets. And just like the ice cream man or candy
striper, offer candy bars or ice cream novelties once in a while.
These are foods we enjoy every day—our residents will enjoy
them, too.
If you plan to develop a snack cart program, determine
the following:
• who can order specific snacks for those residents with special
needs (weight loss, malnutrition, or special diets);
• who will pass the snacks and supplements and at what times;
and
• how acceptance will be communicated with nursing and dietary.
Snack Kitchens
Snack kitchens should be easily accessible to residents, families,
and staff. Keep the kitchens stocked with fresh and varied choices
of foods and beverages daily. Snack kitchens are popular for a number
of reasons:
• Foods and beverages are readily available. Residents can
visit the area any time of the day or night to snack between meals,
at bedtime, or anytime they like.
• Healthful snacks appropriate for most special diets can
be on hand (eg, fresh fruit, applesauce, pretzels, crackers and
peanut butter, cereal and milk, sugar-free and vitamin C-fortified
beverages).
If you decide to have a snack kitchen, determine
the following:
• who will stock the kitchen;
• what the stocking rotation of foods will be; and
• who will keep the kitchen clean and monitor for safe food
handling.
Follow the Holidays
Use seasons, celebrations, or themes to guide your snack rotation.
Try a few of the following suggestions:
• In fall, serve cider and doughnuts or s’mores and
hot chocolate.
• In winter, serve tea and scones, traditional holiday cookies
and milk, or valentine or shamrock cookies.
• In spring, serve hot dogs and “near beer” for
baseball season (or real beer for those who can have it).
• In summer, have an ice cream social and serve root beer
floats and fruit smoothies.
• Anytime of year, have pizza night, candy time (chocolate
candy and milk), milk and cereal, or resident choice snacks.
If you’d like to have healthier and happier
residents, satisfied families, reduced weight loss, and fewer complications,
use a variety of the ideas presented here and let your residents
have a snackin’ good time!
— Becky Dorner, RD, LD, is a speaker and
author who provides publications, presentations, and consulting
services to enhance the quality of care for our nation’s older
adults. Visit www.beckydorner.com
for free articles, newsletters, and information, or call 800-342-0285.
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