Sarac, Dilara GokseninDemirel, BirsenSeven Avuk, HandeKevenk, Ahmet Ugur2026-04-042026-04-0420252769-70612769-707Xhttps://doi.org/10.1080/27697061.2025.2579113https://hdl.handle.net/11411/10548Objective: Malnutrition is a preventable issue that complicates patient recovery and increases healthcare costs. This study evaluated inpatients' satisfaction with food services and its impact on malnutrition. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 310 patients (52.6% female, median age 42 years) hospitalized for at least seven days. The NRS-2002 screening test was administered within two days of admission and repeated on day seven, along with the Acute Care Hospital Foodservice Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire (ACHFPSQ). Results: The risk of malnutrition increased from 21.9% initially to 38.7% on the 7-day follow-up evaluation (p < 0.001). Higher ACHFPSQ scores were associated with a decreased malnutrition risk, with significant correlations found between food quality, meal service quality, staff/service issues, and lower malnutrition risk (p < 0.05). Very weak positive but statistically significant relationships were detected between the total scale score, body weight, and BMI (p < 0.05). The risk of malnutrition decreased as food quality (OR = 0.891; p < 0.001), meal service quality (OR = 0.915; p = 0.001), and staff/service issues scores (OR = 0.925; p = 0.010) increased. Conclusions: This study highlights the importance of hospital food service quality in preventing malnutrition among inpatients. [GRAPHICS]eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessFood ServicesMalnutritionNutritional AssessmentPatient SatisfactionHospital Food Services, Patient Satisfaction and Malnutrition Risk Inpatients: A Pilot StudyArticle2-s2.0-10502112262110.1080/27697061.2025.257911310.1080/27697061.2025.257911341195953Q1Q3WOS:001612133000001