Agudo Villa Teresa, Álvarez-Rodríguez Esther, Caurel Sastre Zaida, Martín Martínez Alfonso, Merinero Palomares Raúl, Alvarez Rodríguez Virginia, Portero Sánchez Isabel
Servicio de Urgencias Generales, Hospital Universitario Severo Ochoa, Universidad Alfonso X, Madrid, España. Grupo de estudio SEMESDiabetes.
Servicio de Urgencias, Hospital Universitario de Getafe, Madrid, España. Grupo de estudio SEMESDiabetes.
Emergencias. 2015 Jun;27(3):150-154.
To analyze the risk profile of patients with diabetes who seek care from hospital emergency departments and emergency department involvement in preventing cardiovascular complications in these patients.
Cross-sectional analysis of case series from 2 Spanish hospital emergency departments. We included all patients with a history or final diagnosis of diabetes mellitus who were treated in the emergency department between November 1, 2010, and June 30, 2011. Each patient's cardiovascular risk profile was analyzed. The main outcome was the appropriate of prescribed treatment to prevent cardiovascular complications according to the 2012 guidelines of the American Diabetes Association on the patient's discharge from emergency care.
A total of 298 patients were included; 275 (92%) had type II diabetes. Ninety percent of the series (269 patients) had at least 1 cardiovascular risk factor and 147 (49%) had prior target organ damage; target organ damage was newly diagnosed in 41 (14%). Fifty-eight percent (172 patients) were discharged home from the emergency department. Although 215 patients (72%) were not adhering to at least 1 previously prescribed preventive treatment and 30 (10%) were not adhering to any prescribed treatment, drug prescriptions were modified only in 1.1% to 3.3% of patients and no follow-up was recommended in 42 cases (24%).
Although diabetic patients treated in emergency departments are at high risk for cardiovascular complications, their visit is not used to optimize preventive treatment for these complications or ensure appropriate follow-up.