AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed glycemic control in noncritically ill diabetic patients at Puerto Rico University Hospital, focusing on their adherence to diabetes treatment guidelines.
  • A total of 147 patients were analyzed, revealing high rates of hyperglycemia (56.7%) during hospitalization, with over half being hyperglycemic during both the first and last 24 hours.
  • The findings indicate inadequate diabetes management, particularly due to clinical inertia in adjusting insulin treatments, highlighting the need for comprehensive educational programs and standardized treatment protocols.

Article Abstract

Objective: To describe the state of glycemic control in noncritically ill diabetic patients admitted to the Puerto Rico University Hospital and adherence to current standard of care guidelines for the treatment of diabetes.

Methods: This was a retrospective study of patients admitted to a general medicine ward with diabetes mellitus as a secondary diagnosis. Clinical data for the first 5 days and the last 24 hours of hospitalization were analyzed.

Results: A total of 147 noncritically ill diabetic patients were evaluated. The rates of hyperglycemia (blood glucose ≥180 mg/dL) and hypoglycemia (blood glucose <70 mg/dL) were 56.7 and 2.8%, respectively. Nearly 60% of patients were hyperglycemic during the first 24 hours of hospitalization (mean random blood glucose, 226.5 mg/dL), and 54.2% were hyperglycemic during the last 24 hours of hospitalization (mean random blood glucose, 196.51 mg/dL). The mean random last glucose value before discharge was 189.6 mg/dL. Most patients were treated with subcutaneous insulin, with basal insulin alone (60%) used as the most common regimen. The proportion of patients classified as uncontrolled receiving basal-bolus therapy increased from 54.3% on day 1 to 60% on day 5, with 40% continuing to receive only basal insulin. Most of the uncontrolled patients had their insulin dose increased (70.1%); however, a substantial proportion had no change (23.7%) or even a decrease (6.2%) in their insulin dose.

Conclusion: The management of hospitalized diabetic patients is suboptimal, probably due to clinical inertia, manifested by absence of appropriate modification of insulin regimen and intensification of dose in uncontrolled diabetic patients. A comprehensive educational diabetes management program, along with standardized insulin orders, should be implemented to improve the care of these patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4273240PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4158/EP13199.ORDOI Listing

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