University College Hospital. Simple ideas to help improve food intake before and after your operation

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University College Hospital Simple ideas to help improve food intake before and after your operation

2 Given By Contact Number Patient s Details Name Operation Admission Date

3 Introduction You are due to be admitted to hospital soon for your bowel operation. Your food intake is extremely important, as good nutrition now will help you to recover more quickly following your operation. If you have lost a lot of weight recently, please discuss this with your doctor or specialist nurse and request them to prescribe 3 bottles of nutritional supplement drinks daily. These nutritional supplement drinks are called either Ensure (milk style) or Ensure fruit (juice style). They are more palatable if served cold and sipped slowly through a straw. Also, please read the Do you have a small appetite? and How to get extra fuel by fortifying your food sections in this booklet. Before you come into hospital Please continue to eat and drink regularly each day. Even if your weight has remained stable your doctor or specialist nurse will give you 10 bottles of Ensure milk shake or Ensure fruit. These should be taken as follows The day before you are admitted to hospital Please try to sip slowly 3 bottles of either Ensure milk shake or 5 bottles of Ensure fruit in addition to your usual drinks and meals. The morning you are due to be admitted to hospital/ morning of your surgery Please take the 2 pre-op carbohydrate drinks 2-3 hours before surgery. This is an essential part of your recovery.

4 After your operation After your operation, please start drinking water, if tolerated, continue to drink free fluids at least up to 1litre. (ask staff in recovery for a glass of water) You will be encouraged to start eating and drinking as soon as possible, as well as walking to the ward fridge and helping yourself to 3 bottles Ensure milk shakes or Ensure fruit each day. Please ask the recovery staff for a glass of water, sip it slowly as tolerated and continue taking free fluids like tea, coffee etc. Your dietician will see you on the ward and give you further advice, if required. Do you have a small appetite? This is a common problem. There are several causes, including illness, anxiety, pain, depression, tiredness or nausea. Try the following ideas to help improve your food and fluid intake. Have smaller meals with frequent snacks e.g. have three small meals and three snacks daily, rather than three large meals. You may find it easier to snack every two hours. Nibbling between meals and snacks often helps. Try nuts, dried or fresh fruit, crisps, biscuits or sweets. Try to make the food as attractive as possible and serve it on a smaller plate. Don t overload the plate. You can always have second helpings or a dessert if you are still hungry. Do not drink fluids before a meal, as they will fill you up.

5 Cold food may be better tolerated than hot food. Try sandwiches, salads, ice cream, jelly and yoghurts. Soft/moist foods may be easier to eat e.g. cauliflower cheese, soups, yogurt or ice cream. Try to have your favourite foods more often to tempt your appetite. Strong flavours may also tempt your appetite e.g. spicy food, sweet food, or bitter foods. Smoking can decrease your appetite, so cut down or stop if you can. When eating, try to relax and eat slowly in comfortable surroundings with no distractions. After eating, sit quietly and relax for a while before lying down or moving around again. If you have good days or good times of the day make the most of them. If you feel hungry make sure you eat, even if your meal is not due at that time. Ensure that the food you eat is fortified (see previous section) if it can be. A small amount of alcohol may stimulate your appetite e.g. wine, sherry, brandy, Guinness. Check with your doctor, nurse or pharmacist if you are allowed alcohol with any medical treatment that you may be having at present. If you do miss a meal completely, due to poor appetite, you could have a milky drink or nutritious soup e.g. Build-Up or scandishake. If this continues for more than a few days, you will need to discuss this with your GP or Practice Nurse.

6 Simple Meal Ideas If you don t feel like eating a big meal, a lighter meal can be just as nutritious. Sandwiches e.g. cold meat and salad, egg (hard boiled), cheese, tinned meat or fish, peanut butter. Spread filling thickly. Remember to use plenty of butter or margarine and add dressings (salad cream, mayonnaise, vinaigrette, etc) where possible. Toast with e.g. beans, egg (hard boiled, scrambled, poached or fried), spaghetti, cheese, tinned fish (e.g. tuna, pilchards or sardines). Other ideas Jacket potato with various toppings e.g. cheese, beans, tinned fish, meat with vegetables or salad. Bacon, egg, tomatoes, beans and bread and butter. Sausage/fish fingers, beans and chips or mashed potato. Cauliflower or macaroni cheese and vegetables with salad and crusty bread roll and butter. Corned beef hash and vegetables. Pie, pasty or sausage roll and vegetables or salad. Stew, casserole, with bread or potatoes, pasta or rice. Omelette, beans/tinned tomatoes, grated cheese, bread and butter. Soup with extra grated cheese or added milk with bread and butter.

7 Snack Ideas Try to have small snacks between meals to improve your overall food intake. Some suitable snacks are: Crackers and cheese and butter Biscuits Chocolate Toast + Butter + Jam/Honey Crumpets + Butter + Jam/Honey Fruit bread/teacakes + butter Fruit (fresh, dried or tinned) Nuts Cakes Yogurts think n creamy types Ice Cream Mousse Bread and butter Cheese Sandwiches Soup + milk/cream/cheese Jelly/milk jelly Milky puddings Milky drinks Crisps Breakfast cereal and milk Dips with Breadsticks, celery, carrots, etc. Make the most of friends and neighbours if they invite you round to have a snack or a meal. Eating a meal with friends can be enjoyable and can help you to eat more.

8 How to get extra fuel by fortifying your food If you have unintentionally lost weight recently, or if you are concerned that you have a small food intake, use the following advice to increase your energy and protein intake. Fortified Milk Add 2-4 tablespoons of dried skimmed milk powder to 1 pint of milk preferably full fat, you can use this as a drink, in cereal or to replace ordinary milk when making custard, milk jellies, milky puddings, sauces, milky drinks (e.g. coffee, drinking chocolate) and soups. Potatoes & Vegetables Add butter or margarine, milk or double cream to mashed potato, Add butter or margarine to jacket potatoes and other vegetables e.g. swede, carrots, parsnip. You can serve cheese sauce over vegetables. Try to use plenty of salad cream, mayonnaise and other dressings over salad vegetables. Also try stir fried vegetables. Soups & Casseroles Try adding grated cheese, dried milk powder or double cream just before serving. If you are having tinned soups, use cream of which will contain more energy. You can make packet soups with milk to make them more nutritious. Add extra meat, lentils, pulses or pasta to soups and casseroles. Have dumplings, bread or croutons with your soups and casseroles.

9 Some more ideas: At breakfast time or maybe at bed-time Use fortified milk for your cereals and drinks, Add honey, syrup, yogurt or fruit (dried or fresh) to cereals. Try adding honey, peanut butter, jam, marmalade or chocolate spread to toast and butter. Desserts/puddings Try these after your main course, or as between meal snacks. Have desserts with ice cream, evaporated/condensed milk or custard. Add dried fruit, fresh fruit, honey or jam to milky puddings. Avoid low fat, low sugar, or healthy eating desserts. Drinks Include Ensure nutrition drinks (previous page). Other nourishing drinks include fruit juice, milkshakes, non-diet squashes and malted drinks (e.g. Horlicks and Ovaltines), hot chocolate, Complan and Build-Up. Store Cupboard Ideas Some days you may not be able to go shopping, either due to your illness, or because of bad weather, etc. Below are some ideas for foods for you to have in your home, so you are always have a good supply of basic foods. Remember to check best before dates before using the foods. Do not use them if they are out of date, as they may be harmful to you.

10 Milk products Long life (UHT) milk or milk powder. Evaporated or condensed milk Canned cream, Cheese spread. Meat and fish Tinned varieties eg. tuna, pilchards, salmon, sardines, ham, pork, corned beef, stewed meat in gravy, chicken in white sauce. Starchy foods Tinned spaghetti, crackers, breakfast cereals, pasta, rice, biscuits, tinned or instant mashed potatoes. Packet or canned soup. Crisps Fruit & Vegetables Tinned varieties e.g. beans, soups, dried fruit, lentils, and other pulses. Desserts Ready made custard, milky puddings, jelly, packet mousse, long life yogurt, instant whip dessert. Drinks Squash, drinking chocolate, malted milk, milky drinks, long life fruit juice. Others Jam, honey, sweets, chocolate, peanut butter, syrup. Make the most of your freezer keep a few ready-made meals in your freezer for use on days when you really don t feel like cooking.

Space for notes and questions 11

Author: Rachael Nakawungu Enhanced Recovery Nurse Specialist Publication Date: February 2010 Date last reviewed: September 2014 Date next review due: September 2016 Leaflet code: UCLH/S&C/GI/ENHANCEDRECOVERY/DIETADVICE/1 University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust