It has been suggested that current care for diabetes inpatients remains inadequate and that greater attention is required for high quality management. In this project the aspect of hypoglycaemia was studied in a busy medical receiving ward at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. A large proportion of inpatients have diabetes and episodes of hypoglycaemia experienced by this population can delay discharge and indeed be detrimental to health. Thus it is important from both an organisational and patient perspective to manage this population well. In this project BM machine data was analysed to identify patients who were hypoglycaemic. These patients were then tracked down to study the subsequent management and compared this against recommended guidanc...
Background: Successful control of hyperglycemia has been shown to improve outcomes for diabetes pati...
Increasing numbers of people, particularly with type 1 diabetes (T1D), are using wearable technologi...
Currently patients with diabetes comprise up to 25–30 % of the census of adult wards and critical ca...
Diabetes is becoming more prevalent in the UK and this is represented in the in-patient cohort, such...
Diabetes is becoming more prevalent in the UK and this is represented in the in-patient cohort, such...
© 2020 SB Communications Group. All rights reserved. In 2016, NHS England announced the opportunity ...
Background: Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is one of the most prevalent chronic diseases in Singapore. It is...
Introduction: Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is a better tool to detect hyper and hypoglycemia ...
Aims/hypothesis We analysed data obtained from the electronic patient records of inpatients with di...
ObjectiveSevere hypoglycemia (blood glucose Research design and methodsWe performed retrospective re...
AbstractHypoglycemia occurred on hospitalized patients would result in severe complications. So we m...
Aims for Improvement It is the aim of our quality improvement project to create a standardized metho...
We are describing our experience of introducing Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) for the first ti...
Emerging evidence shows that suboptimal glycaemic control is associated with increased morbidity and...
Aims: This pragmatic review aimed to map and summarize the literature on model of care interventions...
Background: Successful control of hyperglycemia has been shown to improve outcomes for diabetes pati...
Increasing numbers of people, particularly with type 1 diabetes (T1D), are using wearable technologi...
Currently patients with diabetes comprise up to 25–30 % of the census of adult wards and critical ca...
Diabetes is becoming more prevalent in the UK and this is represented in the in-patient cohort, such...
Diabetes is becoming more prevalent in the UK and this is represented in the in-patient cohort, such...
© 2020 SB Communications Group. All rights reserved. In 2016, NHS England announced the opportunity ...
Background: Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is one of the most prevalent chronic diseases in Singapore. It is...
Introduction: Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is a better tool to detect hyper and hypoglycemia ...
Aims/hypothesis We analysed data obtained from the electronic patient records of inpatients with di...
ObjectiveSevere hypoglycemia (blood glucose Research design and methodsWe performed retrospective re...
AbstractHypoglycemia occurred on hospitalized patients would result in severe complications. So we m...
Aims for Improvement It is the aim of our quality improvement project to create a standardized metho...
We are describing our experience of introducing Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) for the first ti...
Emerging evidence shows that suboptimal glycaemic control is associated with increased morbidity and...
Aims: This pragmatic review aimed to map and summarize the literature on model of care interventions...
Background: Successful control of hyperglycemia has been shown to improve outcomes for diabetes pati...
Increasing numbers of people, particularly with type 1 diabetes (T1D), are using wearable technologi...
Currently patients with diabetes comprise up to 25–30 % of the census of adult wards and critical ca...