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Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital

OBJECTIVES: We aimed to determine the effectiveness of glycaemic monitoring and control in the inpatient setting of a tertiary New Zealand hospital, and whether suboptimal control and monitoring may be associated with adverse outcomes in both Māori and Non-Māori diabetes patients. METHODS: Clinical...

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Autores principales: Duggan, Dave A, Chepulis, Lynne M, Brown, Natasha, Wang, Chris, Wu, Justina E, Nguyen, Ha, Paul, Ryan G
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SBDR - Society for Biomedical Diabetes Research 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10337630/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1900/RDS.2023.19.43
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author Duggan, Dave A
Chepulis, Lynne M
Brown, Natasha
Wang, Chris
Wu, Justina E
Nguyen, Ha
Paul, Ryan G
author_facet Duggan, Dave A
Chepulis, Lynne M
Brown, Natasha
Wang, Chris
Wu, Justina E
Nguyen, Ha
Paul, Ryan G
author_sort Duggan, Dave A
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: We aimed to determine the effectiveness of glycaemic monitoring and control in the inpatient setting of a tertiary New Zealand hospital, and whether suboptimal control and monitoring may be associated with adverse outcomes in both Māori and Non-Māori diabetes patients. METHODS: Clinical records including all glucose levels (n = 51,680) from inpatients ≥ 15 years old with diabetes who were admitted to Waikato Hospital for > 24 hours between 1st July 2017 to 30th June 2018 were extracted electronically from the hospital database, and the data retrospectively examined (n=3,380 patients and 4,901 admissions). RESULTS: Overall 80.8% of diabetes inpatients had their blood glucose levels monitored. Patients experiencing ≥ 1 episode of hypoglycaemia were 1.90 times (CI: 1.37-2.64) and 1.94 times (CI: 1.51-2.49) more likely to die within 60 days and one year respectively, with an increased length of hospital stay by a mean of 3.13 weeks (CI: 2.55-3.85). Māori patients were more likely to experience ≥ 1 episode of hypoglycaemia (OR: 1.46), with a higher one-year mortality (p<0.001) as well as higher readmission rates at 30,60, 90 and 365 days than non-Māori. Blood glucose checks at least once every 24 hours were associated with shorter hospital stays (0.36 weeks) and a lower one-year mortality (Adjusted odds ratios (OR): 0.77, CI: 0.64-0.91). CONCLUSIONS: At least one episode of inpatient hypoglycaemia was associated with a statistically significant increase in 60-day and one-year mortality as well as notably longer hospital stays, with more frequent hypoglycaemia occurring in Māori patients. Significant hyperglycaemia was associated with an increased one-year mortality, higher readmission rates within one year and longer hospital stays.
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spelling pubmed-103376302023-07-13 Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital Duggan, Dave A Chepulis, Lynne M Brown, Natasha Wang, Chris Wu, Justina E Nguyen, Ha Paul, Ryan G Rev Diabet Stud Research OBJECTIVES: We aimed to determine the effectiveness of glycaemic monitoring and control in the inpatient setting of a tertiary New Zealand hospital, and whether suboptimal control and monitoring may be associated with adverse outcomes in both Māori and Non-Māori diabetes patients. METHODS: Clinical records including all glucose levels (n = 51,680) from inpatients ≥ 15 years old with diabetes who were admitted to Waikato Hospital for > 24 hours between 1st July 2017 to 30th June 2018 were extracted electronically from the hospital database, and the data retrospectively examined (n=3,380 patients and 4,901 admissions). RESULTS: Overall 80.8% of diabetes inpatients had their blood glucose levels monitored. Patients experiencing ≥ 1 episode of hypoglycaemia were 1.90 times (CI: 1.37-2.64) and 1.94 times (CI: 1.51-2.49) more likely to die within 60 days and one year respectively, with an increased length of hospital stay by a mean of 3.13 weeks (CI: 2.55-3.85). Māori patients were more likely to experience ≥ 1 episode of hypoglycaemia (OR: 1.46), with a higher one-year mortality (p<0.001) as well as higher readmission rates at 30,60, 90 and 365 days than non-Māori. Blood glucose checks at least once every 24 hours were associated with shorter hospital stays (0.36 weeks) and a lower one-year mortality (Adjusted odds ratios (OR): 0.77, CI: 0.64-0.91). CONCLUSIONS: At least one episode of inpatient hypoglycaemia was associated with a statistically significant increase in 60-day and one-year mortality as well as notably longer hospital stays, with more frequent hypoglycaemia occurring in Māori patients. Significant hyperglycaemia was associated with an increased one-year mortality, higher readmission rates within one year and longer hospital stays. SBDR - Society for Biomedical Diabetes Research 2023-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10337630/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1900/RDS.2023.19.43 Text en Copyright © by Lab & Life Press https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Research
Duggan, Dave A
Chepulis, Lynne M
Brown, Natasha
Wang, Chris
Wu, Justina E
Nguyen, Ha
Paul, Ryan G
Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital
title Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital
title_full Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital
title_fullStr Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital
title_full_unstemmed Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital
title_short Suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary New Zealand hospital
title_sort suboptimal monitoring of glucose levels and poor glycaemic control is associated with increased mortality and length of stay in adult inpatients with diabetes in a tertiary new zealand hospital
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10337630/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1900/RDS.2023.19.43
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