Scottish pilot to target diabetes hospital care

By Editor
6th October 2016
Care planning, Good practice Hypoglycaemia Inpatient Latest news Northern England

A pilot is underway in Scottish hospitals to teach staff how to treat people with diabetes.

The initiative has been launched because a fifth of inpatients suffer potentially life-threatening blood sugar lows.

Around 15 per cent of hospital patients have diabetes and these people often have longer stays than patients without diabetes, regardless of the reason for admission.

The pioneering Diabetes Think Check Act programme has already been trialled in Glasgow and Lothian and has a 20 per cent drop in hypoglycaemic episodes which can cause people to stay in hospital for up to five extra days.

Symptoms can include headaches, shakiness and confusion. In the most severe cases patients can become unconscious or suffer seizures.

 The NHS Scotland Quality Improvement Hub is working hard to try and improve the care of patients who have diabetes as it said many healthcare professionals are unsure how to manage their patients’ condition.

Speaking to The Scotsman newspaper Linda McGlynn, patient and healthcare professional manager at Diabetes Scotland, said: “When you go into hospital you are usually told to bring your tablets with you. Then staff will take them off you to administer them.

“The problem is, if you have diabetes, you are often used to managing your own condition. Then when it is taken away, you don’t have access to it if you need it.”

Some wards lack food supplies, which can help patients raise their blood sugarquickly, or do not have the specialist diabetes staff, she said.

The pilot provides ready-made “hypo boxes” for hospitals, which contain medical guidance as well as glucose tablets or drinks if the patient can swallow, or gels to use if they cannot consume food.

Every Scottish health board would benefit from the pilot, which could reduce lengthy hospital stays and cut the cost of treating avoidable complications, which costs NHS Scotland £1 billion per year.

Dr Stuart Ritchie, consultant physician at NHS Lothian and pilot clinical adviser, said: “The number of inpatients in hospital with diabetes is increasing.

“While it might not be why they are in hospital, their diabetes is very important in understanding their care. There is no reason why this couldn’t be used in every health board in Scotland.”

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