The International Dysphagia Diet Standardisation Initiative (IDDSI) framework provides a universal language for texture-modified food and thickened liquids. Since its global launch in 2019, IDDSI has become the standard of care in hospital and community settings across the UK, Australia, Canada, and the United States — and is now embedded in Hong Kong’s care food ecosystem through the HKCSS Care Food Directory and the GBA group standards T/SATA 084-2025 and T/SATA 094-2025.
For Hong Kong and Greater Bay Area care homes, implementing IDDSI is no longer optional best practice: it is the benchmark against which procurement officers, inspectors, and families evaluate food safety. This guide provides a practical roadmap for Residential Care Homes for the Elderly (RCHEs), nursing homes (護養院), and residential care homes for persons with disabilities (RCHDs) to implement IDDSI end-to-end.
Dysphagia (swallowing difficulty) affects an estimated 30–40% of care home residents in Hong Kong. The consequences of unmanaged dysphagia are severe:
Hong Kong’s Social Welfare Department (SWD) Code of Practice requires RCHEs to ensure “proper and adequate food” for residents. While IDDSI is not currently cited by name in the Code, the HKCSS Care Food Directory — which uses IDDSI levels — is the practical reference for inspectors assessing food appropriateness. Care homes that cannot demonstrate IDDSI-aligned food preparation are increasingly at a disadvantage in tender scoring and licensing reviews.
| Factor | Before IDDSI | After IDDSI Implementation |
|---|---|---|
| Thickener waste | High (inconsistent mixing) | Reduced 15–25% through standardised recipes |
| Aspiration-related hospitalisation | Baseline | Potentially reduced 20–30% with correct texture prescription |
| Staff re-work at meal service | Frequent | Reduced through pre-labelled, pre-tested portions |
| Family complaints about food | Common | Significantly reduced when families see IDDSI labels on menus |
| Procurement clarity | Unclear specifications | IDDSI level on tender documents aligns suppliers |
IDDSI implementation begins not in the kitchen, but with the clinical assessment of each resident’s swallowing function.
In Hong Kong, the formal dysphagia assessment is conducted by a Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP / 言語治療師). For residents in RCHEs without on-site SLP access, referral pathways include:
Care home managers and nursing staff must not independently assign IDDSI texture levels without SLP input for residents with identified or suspected dysphagia. However, nursing staff can and should conduct bedside screening to identify residents who need SLP referral.
The most practical screening tool for care home nursing staff is the EAT-10 (see EAT-10 Screening Guide). A score of 3 or above triggers SLP referral.
For new admissions, a structured three-stage bedside water swallow test — such as the Sydney Swallowing Questionnaire or a facility-adapted protocol — is recommended within 48 hours of admission for residents with neurological conditions, recent hospitalisation for pneumonia, weight loss >5% in 3 months, or known stroke history.
Admission → Nurse screens (EAT-10 + medical history)
↓
Risk identified → SLP assessment (formal evaluation)
↓
SLP prescribes IDDSI Food Level (0–7) and Drink Level (0–4)
↓
Prescription documented in resident care plan
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Communicated to catering team (food code on meal tray ticket)
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Reviewed at 3-month interval or on status change
Each resident’s IDDSI prescription must be recorded in:
| Role | Training Required |
|---|---|
| Kitchen staff (cooks, food prep) | IDDSI food preparation, IDDSI fork/spoon/syringe tests, recipe standardisation |
| Care staff (護理員) | Recognising IDDSI levels, safe feeding techniques, documenting refusal and choking incidents |
| Nursing staff (registered nurses) | Dysphagia screening, escalation protocol, medication crushing rules at IDDSI levels |
| Management / supervisors | Audit procedures, procurement standards, complaint handling |
| SLP (if on-site or visiting) | Train-the-trainer role; update kitchen and nursing staff on individual residents |
Given the multilingual workforce in Hong Kong care homes (Cantonese-speaking residents, staff from various backgrounds), training should include:
Every dish on the menu must have a standardised recipe that specifies:
Start with the highest-volume dishes: rice, fish, chicken, tofu, leafy vegetables, soup. A care home serving 100 residents typically needs 15–25 standardised texture-modified recipes to cover 80% of meal production.
Train kitchen supervisors to test at least one batch per meal service using the IDDSI testing kit:
| Test | What it verifies | Equipment |
|---|---|---|
| Fork drip test | Puree (Level 4) — food clings to fork but drops slowly | Standard dinner fork |
| Fork pressure test | Minced (Level 5) — food separates easily under 2–3 cm fork width | Standard dinner fork |
| Spoon tilt test | Puree/minced — food slides off spoon in a controlled way | Standard teaspoon |
| 10 mL syringe test | Thickened fluids Levels 1–4 — volume remaining in syringe after 10 seconds | 10 mL catheter-tip syringe (BD or equivalent) |
| Fork/chopstick test | Soft (Level 6) — food can be cut and mashed with side of fork | Standard fork |
Every portion served to a resident with a texture prescription must be labelled with the IDDSI level code:
A basic IDDSI kitchen implementation requires:
The most frequent error. Different thickener brands require different amounts to reach the same IDDSI level. Dosing by “feel” rather than by recipe leads to under-thickened or over-thickened fluids — both dangerous.
Fix: Post a dose-level chart at every thickener preparation station. Use measuring spoons, not tablespoon estimation. Re-verify after any brand change.
Foods prepared to IDDSI Level 5 (minced) may degrade to Level 4 (puree) after 30 minutes in a bain-marie. Similarly, starched-based thickened drinks continue to thicken over time.
Fix: Prepare texture-modified dishes as close to service as possible. Test thickened drinks at service time, not at preparation time.
Starch-based thickeners thin out significantly at temperatures above 60°C. Hot soups thickened with starch may be under-level when tested hot and over-level when cooled.
Fix: Switch to xanthan gum-based thickeners for hot fluids, or test all hot drinks at serving temperature. See Thickener Comparison Guide.
Prescribing the same IDDSI level to every resident with a dysphagia diagnosis ignores the wide variability in swallowing physiology. A resident with mild post-stroke dysphagia may safely eat Level 6 (soft) while a resident with advanced dementia may require Level 4 (puree).
Fix: Individualise every prescription. Conduct SLP review when resident status changes.
Whole tablets or capsules are regularly given to residents prescribed thickened fluids or texture-modified food, with no adaptation. This is a separate and serious aspiration risk.
Fix: Involve the pharmacist in IDDSI implementation. Create a medication modification chart specifying which medications can be crushed, dispersed in thickened fluids, or require liquid alternatives. See Medication Administration in Dysphagia.
A designated supervisor should conduct a monthly kitchen audit using a standardised checklist:
| Audit Item | Pass Criterion |
|---|---|
| Thickener dose charts posted at station | Present, current brand, legible |
| Syringes available and clean | At least 2 per station |
| Test results recorded for current week | Log completed with dates and results |
| No unlabelled texture-modified portions | Zero unlabelled items in service area |
| Staff can demonstrate syringe test | At least 80% of tested staff pass |
Quarterly review of care plans should verify:
Every choking incident, refusal of texture-modified food, and aspiration event should be recorded and reviewed. A pattern of incidents at a particular texture level may indicate a kitchen preparation problem, a prescription error, or a change in resident status requiring SLP re-assessment.
| Month | Actions |
|---|---|
| Month 1 | Management briefing; designate IDDSI champion (senior nurse or dietitian); complete baseline audit of current practice |
| Month 2 | SLP assessment of all residents currently on modified diet; update care plans with formal IDDSI prescriptions |
| Month 3 | Kitchen staff training (all shifts); introduce standardised recipes for top 10 dishes; purchase testing equipment |
| Month 4 | Care staff training (feeding assistance module); introduce tray ticket labelling system |
| Month 5 | Full implementation; monthly audit begins; thickener brand rationalisation if needed |
| Month 6 | Review and report: incident trends, waste reduction, family feedback; plan annual refresher training |
For care homes in the Greater Bay Area (or HK homes purchasing from GBA suppliers), IDDSI-aligned procurement is becoming mandatory in tender documents. When specifying texture-modified food from suppliers, include:
The SWD’s Enhanced Bought Place Scheme (EBPS) and the Quality Framework for Residential Care Homes increasingly expect documentation of dietary standards. IDDSI implementation records double as evidence of quality care for licensing purposes.
Implementing IDDSI in a Hong Kong care home is a multi-disciplinary project spanning clinical assessment, kitchen operations, staff training, documentation, and quality audit. The investment is substantial — typically 3–6 months for a full rollout — but the evidence base strongly supports reduced aspiration pneumonia, reduced hospitalisation, and improved resident satisfaction as outcomes.
The most critical success factor is leadership commitment. When management designates an IDDSI champion, allocates time for training, and integrates IDDSI verification into routine audit, the framework sustains itself. Without that commitment, even the best-designed checklists fail at the first busy weekend shift.
Author: SeniorDeli (Carewells) — raymond@seniordeli.com
Licensed under CC BY 4.0. You are free to share and adapt this material with attribution.