A Quality Assessment and Evaluation of Credible Online Dietary Resources for Patients with an Ileoanal Pouch
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction and Analysis
2.4. Content Quality Analysis
2.5. Readability of Written Information
2.6. Content Analysis
2.7. Shared Decision-Making Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Content Quality
3.2. Readability
3.3. Summative Content Analysis
- General dietary advice for pouch: Recommendations of specific food to be consumed were most commonly mentioned (n = 10 websites), where some explained reasons such as “protein-containing foods for repair of muscle” and others just provided lists of foods to include. Foods to avoid (n = 9) also varied and included high-sugar foods and spicy foods. Eating styles (n = 9), such as the timing of meals and specific nutrients to consume (n = 9), were the next most common and also varied in specific details. The implementation of a pre-surgical diet using the enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol was the least common (n = 1).
- Dietary strategies for symptom management: Most websites provided advice on specific foods to decrease output (n = 8) followed by increasing output (n = 7), reducing anal irritation (n = 7), increasing wind (n = 6), passing undigested food (n = 4), bloating (n = 4), increasing stool odour (n = 4), decreasing stool odour (n = 1), loose stools (n = 3), and increasing urgency (n = 2). There were duplicates in this, with the same table being used across the St. Mark’s-related documents. Most listed individual foods, beverages, and/or ingredients, while some included foods with multiple ingredients, such as suet pudding and coleslaw.
- Addressing risks associated with having a pouch: Dehydration was the most commonly mentioned risk (n = 9), followed by pouchitis (n = 5), bowel obstructions, (n = 3), incontinence or leakage (n = 2), and (abnormal) bile acid malabsorption (n = 1).
- Optimisation of nutritional intake: Websites focused on specific nutrients to consume or increase in pouches (n = 9), as well as nutrients of concern specific to pouches (n = 5).
3.4. Shared Decision-Making
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name of Organisation | URL | Type of Organisation | City and Country of Origin | Format of Diet Information |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh Teaching Hospitals | https://www.wwl.nhs.uk/media/.leaflets/5ffeb6edcf7e70.74545301.pdf (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Government healthcare | Wigan, UK | Four-page patient leaflet |
Nova Scotia Health | https://www.nshealth.ca/patient-education-resources/0555 (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Government healthcare | Halifax, Canada | Eight-page leaflet |
St. Mark’s Hospital | https://www.stmarkshospital.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Healthy-eating-for-people-with-internal-pouches.pdf (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Government healthcare | London, UK | Ten-page leaflet |
Crohn’s Colitis Foundation | https://www.crohnscolitisfoundation.org/patientsandcaregivers/diet-and-nutrition/surgery-and-nutrition/j-pouch-surgery-nutrition (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Foundations/associations | New York City, USA | Single online page |
Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition Group | https://www.peng.org.uk/pdfs/diet-sheets/internal-pouches.pdf (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Foundations/associations | Birmingham, UK | Six-page patient leaflet |
University of Washington Medical Centre | https://healthonline.washington.edu/sites/default/files/record_pdfs/J-Pouch_Nutritional_Guidelines_9_09.pdf (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Academic institution | Seattle, USA | Two-page leaflet |
University of California | https://www.ucsfhealth.org/education/special-concerns-for-people-with-j-pouches (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Academic institution | Oakland, USA | Single online page with various issues related to surgery, including a section on diet |
Hull University Teaching Hospitals | https://www.hey.nhs.uk/patient-leaflet/eating-with-an-ileoanal-pouch/#:~:text=Eating%20small%20amounts%20more%20frequently,as%20Quorn%2C%20Tofu%20and%20tempeh (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Government healthcare | Hull, UK | Single online page |
University of Wisconsin | https://patient.uwhealth.org/healthfacts/355 (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Academic institution | Madison, USA | Two-page leaflet |
Crohn’s & Colitis Dietitians | https://crohnsandcolitisdietitians.com/j-pouch-surgery-what-to-eat-the-nutritional-implications/ (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Private clinic | USA | Blog-style page |
Nalm Clinic | https://nalmclinic.com/blog-1/2022/2/14/is-diet-important-with-a-j-pouch (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Private clinic | London, UK | Blog-style page |
United Ostomy Associations of America | https://www.ostomy.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/IleoanalReservoir_J-Pouch-Guide.pdf (accessed 27 Jun 2024) | Foundations/associations | Biddeford, USA | Twenty-nine-page patient leaflet about an internal reservoir—including a section on diet |
Source | Health Condition, Decision, and Available Options | Details of Available Options | Support for Person’s Values, Circumstances, and Preferences | Use of Language and Numbers/Flesch–Kincaid (Readability) Score | Formats and Availability | Evidence Sources | Patient Involvement and Co-Production | Risks and Benefits | Review Cycle and Declaration of Interests | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh Teaching Hospitals | Partial | Yes | No | Language easy to understand but no figures or numbers. No diagrams or numbers, but pictures and tables to break up text. | 62.6 | Yes—“this leaflet is also available in audio, large print, Braille and other languages upon request” | No | No | Partial | Partial |
Nova Scotia Health | Partial | Yes | No | Language easy to understand. No diagrams or numbers, but pictures and tables to break up text. | 73.5 | Yes—website with PDF print out available with links to online pamphlets/resources | No | No | No | Partial |
St. Mark’s Hospital | Partial | Partial | No | Fairly easy to understand. However, low Flesch–Kincaid score. No diagrams or numbers, but pictures and tables to break up text. | 43.1 | Yes—online website for PDF print out. Mentions discussing decision-making with HCP | Partial | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Crohn’s Colitis Foundation | No | No | No | Fairly easy to understand language. However, low Flesch–Kincaid. No diagrams, numbers, or tables. | 47.6 | Single online page | Yes | No | No | No |
Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition Group | Partial | Yes | No | Fairly easy to understand. However, low Flesch–Kincaid score. No diagrams or numbers, but text is broken up by a table. | 49.7 | Yes—six-page website for PDF print out | Partial | No | Partial | No |
University of Washington Medical Centre | Partial | Partial | No | Language easy to understand. All of the text in dot points and a table. | 70.6 | Yes, two-page online website PDF for print out | No | No | No | Partial |
University of California | Yes | Partial | No | Fairly easy to understand language with Flesch Kincaid score. No use of diagrams, visuals, numbers, or tables. | 59.3 | Single online page | Partial | No | Yes | No |
Hull University Teaching Hospitals | Partial | Partial | No | Language easy to understand. Most of the text in dot points, also a table. | 64.4 | Yes—online site is translatable into seven languages | No | No | Partial | Partial |
University of Wisconsin | Partial | Partial | No | Language easy to understand. No figures, numbers, or tables. | 70.4 | Double page online PDF for print | No | No | Partial | No |
Crohn’s & Colitis Dietitians | Yes | Partial | No | Fairly easy to understand language but does get technical when discussing studies. Flesch–Kincaid score low. No use of diagrams, pictures, or numbers. | 45.4 | Online webpage | Partial | No | Partial | Partial |
Nalm Clinic | No | No | No | Fairly easy to understand language; however, does get technical when discussing studies. Flesch–Kincaid score low. No use of diagrams, pictures, or numbers. | 42.4 | Online webpage | Partial | No | Partial | No |
United Ostomy Associations of America | Partial | Partial | No | Fairly easy to understand language but does get technical in certain sections. Flesch–Kincaid score low. Use of diagrams and tables to support text. | 49.7 | Online booklet and guidebook with PDF print out available | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Category | Codes | No. of Websites |
---|---|---|
General dietary advice for pouch | Pre-operative nutrition | 1 |
Initial post-operative diet | 7 | |
Eating styles | 9 | |
Foods to include | 10 | |
Foods to avoid | 9 | |
Long-term diet | 3 | |
Use of supplements | 4 | |
Diet strategies for symptom management | Decrease output | 8 |
Increase output | 7 | |
Anal irritation | 7 | |
Increase wind | 6 | |
Passing undigested food | 4 | |
Bloating | 4 | |
Increase stool odour | 4 | |
Decrease stool odour | 1 | |
Loose stools | 3 | |
Increased urgency | 2 | |
Addressing risks associated with having a pouch | Dehydration | 9 |
Pouchitis | 5 | |
Bowel obstruction | 3 | |
Bile acid malabsorption | 1 | |
Incontinence or leakage | 2 | |
Optimisation of nutritional intake | Nutrients to consume/increase specific to pouches | 9 |
Nutrients of concern specific to pouches | 5 |
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Rhys-Jones, D.R.; Ghersin, I.; Argyriou, O.; Blackwell, S.; Lester, J.; Gibson, P.R.; Halmos, E.P.; Ardalan, Z.; Warusavitarne, J.; Sahnan, K.; et al. A Quality Assessment and Evaluation of Credible Online Dietary Resources for Patients with an Ileoanal Pouch. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 5348. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14155348
Rhys-Jones DR, Ghersin I, Argyriou O, Blackwell S, Lester J, Gibson PR, Halmos EP, Ardalan Z, Warusavitarne J, Sahnan K, et al. A Quality Assessment and Evaluation of Credible Online Dietary Resources for Patients with an Ileoanal Pouch. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025; 14(15):5348. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14155348
Chicago/Turabian StyleRhys-Jones, Dakota R., Itai Ghersin, Orestis Argyriou, Sue Blackwell, Jasmine Lester, Peter R. Gibson, Emma P. Halmos, Zaid Ardalan, Janindra Warusavitarne, Kapil Sahnan, and et al. 2025. "A Quality Assessment and Evaluation of Credible Online Dietary Resources for Patients with an Ileoanal Pouch" Journal of Clinical Medicine 14, no. 15: 5348. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14155348
APA StyleRhys-Jones, D. R., Ghersin, I., Argyriou, O., Blackwell, S., Lester, J., Gibson, P. R., Halmos, E. P., Ardalan, Z., Warusavitarne, J., Sahnan, K., Segal, J. P., Hart, A., & Yao, C. K. (2025). A Quality Assessment and Evaluation of Credible Online Dietary Resources for Patients with an Ileoanal Pouch. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(15), 5348. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14155348