Healthcare professionals’ experiences and thoughts on eating and drinking with acknowledged risks in older adults: a comparison of Japan and the UK
Yuki Yoshimatsu, Marianne Markowski, David Graeme Smithard, Dharinee Hansjee, Tadayuki Hashimoto, Hiroyuki Nagano, Ryan Essex

TL;DR
This study compares healthcare professionals' confidence in managing eating and drinking with acknowledged risks for older adults in Japan and the UK.
Contribution
The study identifies factors influencing healthcare professionals' confidence in EDAR decision-making across two countries.
Findings
UK healthcare professionals showed higher confidence in EDAR decision-making compared to Japanese professionals.
Factors like years of experience and involvement in EDAR-related work increased confidence.
Frameworks and education were ranked as most beneficial for EDAR support in both countries.
Abstract
Older adults are commonly restricted of oral intake due to concerns of aspiration. Eating and drinking with acknowledged risks (EDAR) is an alternative pathway that facilitates comfort, dignity and autonomy. However, EDAR decision-making is difficult, with guidance only existing in the UK, and support not readily available. This study was the third in a mixed-methods project aiming to understand how to develop EDAR further whilst providing clinicians with optimal support. This study aimed to reveal the factors that shape confidence in healthcare professionals regarding EDAR decision-making. We performed a survey regarding the experiences of healthcare professionals in Japan and the UK with EDAR in older adults. We developed the survey based on themes extracted from our previous qualitative study. There were 1452 responses (1058 Japanese, 394 UK). Confidence towards EDAR was higher in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · Frailty in Older Adults · Alcoholism and Thiamine Deficiency
