Cargando…

MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes

Background & Aims: Despite poor glycemic control being associated with worse neurological outcome in stroke patients, there remains considerable variability in management. This quality improvement project was conducted to evaluate the current practice of glycemic management in the enterally fed...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jadoon, Nauman, Yousuf, Quratulain, Ijaz, Aamir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Endocrine Society 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6550780/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-MON-011
_version_ 1783424260521328640
author Jadoon, Nauman
Yousuf, Quratulain
Ijaz, Aamir
author_facet Jadoon, Nauman
Yousuf, Quratulain
Ijaz, Aamir
author_sort Jadoon, Nauman
collection PubMed
description Background & Aims: Despite poor glycemic control being associated with worse neurological outcome in stroke patients, there remains considerable variability in management. This quality improvement project was conducted to evaluate the current practice of glycemic management in the enterally fed stroke patients against the JBDS guidelines and improve the glycemic control in these patients. Methods & Results: First PDSA Cycle⋯This involved data collection regarding glycemic control in enterally fed stroke patients with diabetes on stroke wards, focusing on the referral to DSN and dietician, documentation of carbohydrate content in the notes, monitoring of blood glucose levels, management in case blood glucose levs were out of range. The cycle confirmed that although in most cases, there were timely referrals to dieticians in all cases and DSN in many cases, the monitoring and management of glycemic excursions was suboptimal in all cases. (15 episodes of glucose reading being outside of range in 6 patients, no action taken except in 3 episodes when BG>22mmol/l, BG monitored 4 times per day but did not correspond to guidelines which state pre-feed, 4-6 hourly when on feed and hourly if feed unexpectedly switched off) Second PDSA Cycle. Awareness around glycemic management among medical and nursing staff. A two-page document based on recommendations of Joint British Diabetes Society has been prepared and was circulated by email and posted in the ward. It will also be discussed in weekly departmental meeting. Monitoring was done for a further two weeks and then design blood glucose monitoring chart based on JBDS guidelines. PDSA 3. A proforma was designed which after pilot testing and feedback was incorporated in the normal BG monitoring chart. The intervention produced significant improvements in dietician referrals (75% to 100%), diabetic specialist nurse referral within 24 hours(50% to 87.5%), adequate blood glucose monitoring as per guidance(37.5% to 75%), number of patients with blood glucose in range(25% to 62.5%) and action on out of range blood glucose(0% to 66.6%). In conclusion, awareness exercise, provision of guideline summary and introduction of special proforma for enterally fed patients improved compliance with JBDS guidelines and glycemic profile of enterally fed stroke patients with diabetes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6550780
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Endocrine Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-65507802019-06-13 MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes Jadoon, Nauman Yousuf, Quratulain Ijaz, Aamir J Endocr Soc Healthcare Delivery and Education Background & Aims: Despite poor glycemic control being associated with worse neurological outcome in stroke patients, there remains considerable variability in management. This quality improvement project was conducted to evaluate the current practice of glycemic management in the enterally fed stroke patients against the JBDS guidelines and improve the glycemic control in these patients. Methods & Results: First PDSA Cycle⋯This involved data collection regarding glycemic control in enterally fed stroke patients with diabetes on stroke wards, focusing on the referral to DSN and dietician, documentation of carbohydrate content in the notes, monitoring of blood glucose levels, management in case blood glucose levs were out of range. The cycle confirmed that although in most cases, there were timely referrals to dieticians in all cases and DSN in many cases, the monitoring and management of glycemic excursions was suboptimal in all cases. (15 episodes of glucose reading being outside of range in 6 patients, no action taken except in 3 episodes when BG>22mmol/l, BG monitored 4 times per day but did not correspond to guidelines which state pre-feed, 4-6 hourly when on feed and hourly if feed unexpectedly switched off) Second PDSA Cycle. Awareness around glycemic management among medical and nursing staff. A two-page document based on recommendations of Joint British Diabetes Society has been prepared and was circulated by email and posted in the ward. It will also be discussed in weekly departmental meeting. Monitoring was done for a further two weeks and then design blood glucose monitoring chart based on JBDS guidelines. PDSA 3. A proforma was designed which after pilot testing and feedback was incorporated in the normal BG monitoring chart. The intervention produced significant improvements in dietician referrals (75% to 100%), diabetic specialist nurse referral within 24 hours(50% to 87.5%), adequate blood glucose monitoring as per guidance(37.5% to 75%), number of patients with blood glucose in range(25% to 62.5%) and action on out of range blood glucose(0% to 66.6%). In conclusion, awareness exercise, provision of guideline summary and introduction of special proforma for enterally fed patients improved compliance with JBDS guidelines and glycemic profile of enterally fed stroke patients with diabetes. Endocrine Society 2019-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6550780/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-MON-011 Text en Copyright © 2019 Endocrine Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, No-Derivatives License (CC BY-NC-ND; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Healthcare Delivery and Education
Jadoon, Nauman
Yousuf, Quratulain
Ijaz, Aamir
MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes
title MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes
title_full MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes
title_fullStr MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes
title_full_unstemmed MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes
title_short MON-011 Improving Glycemic Control and Management of Enterally Fed Stroke Patients with Diabetes
title_sort mon-011 improving glycemic control and management of enterally fed stroke patients with diabetes
topic Healthcare Delivery and Education
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6550780/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-MON-011
work_keys_str_mv AT jadoonnauman mon011improvingglycemiccontrolandmanagementofenterallyfedstrokepatientswithdiabetes
AT yousufquratulain mon011improvingglycemiccontrolandmanagementofenterallyfedstrokepatientswithdiabetes
AT ijazaamir mon011improvingglycemiccontrolandmanagementofenterallyfedstrokepatientswithdiabetes