𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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Diabetes care in the hospital: Is there clinical inertia?

✍ Scribed by Laura A. D. Knecht; Susanne M. Gauthier; Janna C. Castro; Ronald E. Schmidt; Michael D. Whitaker; Richard S. Zimmerman; Kenneth J. Mishark; Curtiss B. Cook


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
345 KB
Volume
1
Category
Article
ISSN
1553-5592

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND

Effective control of hospital glucose improves outcomes, but little is known about hospital management of diabetes.

OBJECTIVE

Assess hospital‐based diabetes care delivery.

DESIGN

Retrospective chart review.

SETTING

Academic teaching hospital.

PATIENTS

Inpatients with a discharge diagnosis of diabetes or hyperglycemia were selected from electronic records. A random sample (5%, n = 90) was selected for chart review.

MEASUREMENTS

We determined the percentage of patients with diabetes or hyperglycemia documented in admission, daily progress, and discharge notes. We determined the proportion of cases with glucose levels documented in daily progress notes and with changes in hyperglycemia therapy recorded. The frequency of hypoglycemic and hyperglycemic events was also determined.

RESULTS

A diabetes diagnosis was recorded at admission in 96% of patients with preexisting disease, but daily progress notes mentioned diabetes in only 62% of cases and 60% of discharge notes; just 20% of discharges indicated a plan for diabetes follow‐up. Most patients (86%) had bedside glucose measurements ordered, but progress notes tracked values for only 53%, and only 52% had a documented assessment of glucose severity. Hypoglycemic events were rare (11% of patients had at least one bedside glucose < 70 mg/dL), but hyperglycemia was common (71% of cases had at least one bedside glucose > 200 mg/dL). Despite the frequency of hyperglycemia, only 34% of patients had their therapy changed.

CONCLUSIONS

Practitioners were often aware of diabetes at admission, but the problem was often overlooked during hospitalization. The low rate of documentation and therapeutic change suggests the need for interventions to improve provider awareness and enhance inpatient diabetes care. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2006;3:151–160. Β© 2006 Society of Hospital Medicine.


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