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Multidisciplinary strategies to treat severe hypoglycemia in hospitalized patients with diabetes mellitus reduce inpatient mortality rate: Experience from an academic community hospital

  • Deepak Kana Kadayakkara
  • , Priyadarshini Balasubramanian
  • , Katherine Araque
  • , Karri Davis
  • , Fahad Javed
  • , Pontea Niaki
  • , Sachin Majumdar
  • , Gregory Buller

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective Severe hypoglycemia (blood glucose < 50 mg/dl) in hospitalized patients with diabetes mellitus is associated with poor outcomes such as increased mortality and readmission rates. We study the effects of system based interventions in managing severe hypoglycemia and its impact on outcomes. Research design and methods We performed retrospective review of pre- and post- intervention study to quantify severe hypoglycemia in patients admitted in the general internal medicine wards with primary or secondary diagnosis of diabetes mellitus based on ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes. We implemented multidisciplinary interventions including standardization of treatment, education of in-patient medical teams and physician notification and feedback immediately after severe hypoglycemia. The endpoints were the comparative analysis of incidence of severe hypoglycemia, in-patient mortality rate, 30-day mortality rate, 30-day readmission rate, recovery time from hypoglycemia, time to next glucose measurements, use of standardized treatment and physician notification rate pre-and post-intervention. Results The incidence of severe hypoglycemia per patient with diabetes was reduced from 9.6% (233/2416) to 5.6% (202/3607) (p<0.001) post-intervention. The in-patient mortality rate in patients with severe hypoglycemia reduced from 4.1% to 0% (p = 0.019), 30-day mortality rate reduced from 9.8% to 3.8% (p = 0.058) post-intervention. 30-day readmission rate was comparable between pre-intervention (31.7%) and post-intervention (29%) (p = 0.60). In comparison, the mortality and readmission rates of all diabetic patients did not reduce during the same observation periods. Recovery time reduced from 116 (83–161) to 75 (57–102) min (p<0.01), time to next glucose measurement reduced from 39.5 (34–48) to 32 (28–35) min (p<0.01), use of standardized treatment improved from 22.7% (53/233) to 72.2% (146/ 202) (p<0.001) and physician notification rate increased from 29.2 (68/233) to 84.7% (171/ 202) post-intervention. Conclusions Our study shows that multidisciplinary strategies improves the process of early detection and management of severe hypoglycemia and reduce incidence and in-patient mortality rate.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0220956
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume14
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2019

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