Improving the quality of assessment and management of hypoglycaemia in hospitalised patients with diabetes mellitus by introducing 'hypo boxes' to general medical wards with a specialist interest in diabetes

Livingstone, R. and Boyle, J. (2015) Improving the quality of assessment and management of hypoglycaemia in hospitalised patients with diabetes mellitus by introducing 'hypo boxes' to general medical wards with a specialist interest in diabetes. BMJ Quality Improvement Reports, 4(1), u207686.w3. (doi: 10.1136/bmjquality.u207686.w3067)

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Abstract

Diabetes is becoming more prevalent in the UK and this is represented in the in-patient cohort, such that 1 in 6 hospital patients have diabetes (1). The UK National Diabetes In-Patient Audit in 2012 estimated that 30% of patients experience one episode of hypoglycaemia during admission. Hypoglycaemia is associated with increased morbidity and mortality, and longer length of hospital stay. It is therefore important that hypoglycaemia is managed promptly and effectively to reduce associated morbidity. The Joint British Diabetes Society recommends that all wards should have access to ‘Hypo Boxes’ (2). We assessed all episodes of hypoglycaemia (<4.0 mmol/l) in the diabetes wards in over a 4 week period. ‘Hypo Boxes’ were installed to the wards and the appropriateness of treatment and time to correction of hypoglycaemia was re-assessed. Assessment of hypoglycaemia pre-intervention revealed 45 episodes of hypoglycaemia in 14 patients, and 42% (n=19) of episodes were deemed to have been treated appropriately. Only 17.8% of episodes were corrected within 30 minutes, and 33.3% were corrected within 60 minutes. A third of patients (35%) did not have a further blood glucose checked. Following intervention, there was a marked improvement in management. The proportion of appropriately managed episodes increased to 82% (n=35) and management of episodes of severe hypoglycaemia (<3.0 mmol/l) increased to 94%. The time to correction increased with 40% of episodes corrected to >4.0 mmol/l within 30 minutes, and a further 54% between 30-60 minutes. In conclusion, the introduction of ‘Hypo Boxes’ improved the assessment and management of hypoglycaemia.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Boyle, Dr James and Livingstone, Dr Rachel
Authors: Livingstone, R., and Boyle, J.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
Journal Name:BMJ Quality Improvement Reports
Publisher:BMJ Publishing Group
ISSN:2050-1315
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2015 The Authors
First Published:First published in BMJ Quality Improvement Programme 4(1):u207686.w3067
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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