- Medical diagnoses list or the past medical history
- Labs
- Medications
- Relevant medical notes in the medical chart
- Patient interview responses
- Now you’ve got that information, what are you going to do with it?
Another great question.
Generally, you’re going to need to have answers about:
- Weight status
- How they’ll be fed and what the recommended diet order is
- Relevant medical conditions, labs, medications
- Skin integrity and edema status
- Anything additional that might compromise or alter a patient’s nutritional status
- If you can start with all of this information on hand, writing your nutrition assessment will be way easier.
Second, justify every statement and recommendation you make. Every single one.
Every time you make a statement you should include:
- Why something is true (ie: Altered renal labs likely 2/2 CKD stage 3)
- How you know it’s true (ie: Wound healed with skin now intact per RN 5/17 note)
- Why it’s important (ie: Recommend Suplena TID with ongoing inadequate intake <25%, CKD, and malnutrition dx)
- Each intervention and monitoring statement you include in your notes should have a clear justification or reference made in your documentation.
Never assume your reader knows what you’re talking about.
Don’t assume they can find a piece of information tucked into that short note you miraculously stumbled across.
Write every note as though your reader has no idea who your patient is or what’s going on with them. Reference everything, even if that’s your own note (ie: see RD 4/29 eval for details).
This is how you’ll make sure to have complete nutrition assessments every time.













