Lucille Hughes is director of diabetes education and Maura Caragher is inpatient diabetes education coordinator at Mount Sinai South Nassau, Oceanside, NY. Contact author: Lucille Hughes,
Am J Nurs. 2021 May 1;121(5):56-61. doi: 10.1097/01.NAJ.0000751116.58400.46.
Hospitalized patients who have diabetes often experience hospital-acquired hypoglycemia, a potentially serious adverse event; as a result, management of this condition has become an important quality of care indicator in the inpatient environment. A growing body of research and evidence-based clinical guidelines support proper timing of point of care (POC) blood glucose (BG) measurements, mealtime insulin administration, and meal delivery to reduce the incidence of both hypoglycemic and hyperglycemic events. Monitoring and improving the timing of these three patient care interventions are recognized as a crucial step in the safe and effective care of patients with diabetes.
The objective of the QI project was to improve the timing of mealtime insulin administration related to bedside BG monitoring and meal delivery for patients with diabetes who receive mealtime insulin; a secondary goal was to decrease the number of episodes of recurrent hypoglycemia. The overall strategy was to change staff members' approach to mealtime insulin management from a series of individual tasks to a process-oriented collaborative approach.
Nurses on the medical-surgical unit at one hospital within a large health system formed a QI team with staff members in information technology and food and nutrition services. The team implemented an eight-week QI pilot project (July 3 to August 26, 2017) using a multidisciplinary approach to coordinate between POC BG measurement, mealtime insulin administration, and meal delivery.
More than two years after the hospital-wide rollout of the practice change, follow-up analysis has shown that, on both noncritical and critical care units, recurrent hypoglycemia has decreased. For example, comparing data obtained in a six-month period before the pilot project (November 2016 through April 2017) with the same six-month period in 2018 and 2019, more than a year after the pilot project, the percentage of patient stays (admissions) on noncritical care units in which there was a recurrence of hypoglycemia fell from 41.8% (of 1,162 total hospital admissions) to 35.1% (of 792 total hospital admissions); similarly, the percentage of patient stays on critical care units in which recurrent hypoglycemia occurred decreased from 36.8% to 22.8%.
Findings suggest that ensuring a consistent 30-minute window between POC BG measurement and meal delivery enabled nursing staff to perform timely POC BG measurements and administer a more optimal mealtime insulin dose. Increasing interdisciplinary communication, collaboration, and awareness of best practice guidelines relating to proper mealtime insulin administration resulted in a sustained improvement in timing between POC BG measurements and mealtime insulin administration and between mealtime insulin administration and meal delivery.
住院的糖尿病患者经常会经历医院获得性低血糖,这是一种潜在的严重不良事件;因此,这种情况的管理已成为住院环境中重要的护理质量指标。越来越多的研究和基于证据的临床指南支持在床边即时测量血糖 (BG)、给予进餐时胰岛素和提供膳食,以降低低血糖和高血糖事件的发生率。监测和改善这三种患者护理干预措施的时间安排,被认为是安全有效地护理糖尿病患者的关键步骤。
该质量改进项目的目的是改善与床边 BG 监测和膳食提供相关的进餐时胰岛素给药的时间安排,以治疗接受进餐时胰岛素的糖尿病患者;次要目标是减少反复低血糖发作的次数。总体策略是将医务人员对进餐时胰岛素管理的方法从一系列独立的任务转变为以过程为导向的协作方法。
一家大型医疗系统内一家医院的内科-外科病房的护士与信息技术和食品与营养服务部门的工作人员组成了一个质量改进团队。该团队采用多学科方法在床边即时 BG 测量、进餐时胰岛素给药和膳食提供之间进行协调,实施了为期八周的质量改进试点项目(2017 年 7 月 3 日至 8 月 26 日)。
在该实践变更在全院范围内推出两年多后,后续分析显示,在非重症监护病房和重症监护病房,反复低血糖的情况都有所减少。例如,与试点项目前六个月(2016 年 11 月至 2017 年 4 月)的数据相比,在试点项目后一年多的 2018 年和 2019 年的同一六个月期间,非重症监护病房患者住院(入院)期间出现低血糖反复发作的百分比从 41.8%(1162 例总入院人数)下降到 35.1%(792 例总入院人数);同样,重症监护病房患者发生低血糖反复发作的百分比从 36.8%下降到 22.8%。
研究结果表明,确保床边即时 BG 测量和膳食提供之间有一致的 30 分钟窗口期,使护理人员能够及时进行床边即时 BG 测量,并给予更优化的进餐时胰岛素剂量。增加跨学科沟通、协作以及对与正确的进餐时胰岛素给药相关的最佳实践指南的认识,使床边即时 BG 测量和进餐时胰岛素给药之间以及进餐时胰岛素给药和膳食提供之间的时间安排得到持续改善。