| Literature DB >> 31558981 |
Alex Renato Montero1, Jeffrey S Dubin2, Paul Sack1, Michelle F Magee1.
Abstract
Patients with diabetes are increasingly common in hospital settings where optimal glycemic control remains challenging. Inpatient technology-enabled support systems are being designed, adapted and evaluated to meet this challenge. Insulin pump use, increasingly common in outpatients, has been shown to be safe among select inpatients. Dedicated pump protocols and provider training are needed to optimize pump use in the hospital. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has been shown to be comparable to usual care for blood glucose surveillance in intensive care unit (ICU) settings but data on cost effectiveness is lacking. CGM use in non-ICU settings remains investigational and patient use of home CGM in inpatient settings is not recommended due to safety concerns. Compared to unstructured insulin prescription, a continuum of effective electronic medical record-based support for insulin prescription exists from passive order sets to clinical decision support to fully automated electronic Glycemic Management Systems. Relative efficacy and cost among these systems remains unanswered. An array of novel platforms are being evaluated to engage patients in technology-enabled diabetes education in the hospital. These hold tremendous promise in affording universal access to hospitalized patients with diabetes to effective self-management education and its attendant short/long term clinical benefits.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical decision support; Continuous glucose monitoring; Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion; Diabetes; Inpatients; Patient education; Self-management
Year: 2019 PMID: 31558981 PMCID: PMC6748879 DOI: 10.4239/wjd.v10.i9.473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Diabetes ISSN: 1948-9358
Technology-enabled strategies for inpatient glycemic management and diabetes care
| Outpatient technologies adapted for inpatient use | Support insulin management | Personal continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion pumps |
| Continuous glucose monitoring sensor systems | ||
| Technologies developed for inpatient use | Diabetes and glycemic care management, including care transitions | Electronic medical record based clinical decision support |
| Electronic glycemic management systems | ||
| Technology-enabled diabetes education | Engagement in diabetes survival skills education | Electronic medical record-generated, printed education content |
| “SMART” TVs Web-based education platform |
Inpatient diabetes education delivery - current and future states
| 1:1 at the bedside | Unit nurse/Physician/educator provides basic education- often skills based, | Supplemented by printed individualized electronic medical record clinical decision support generated content based on diagnoses, procedures, medications |
| Low-tech | Generic education content delivered | Video-based survival skills education content individualized for diabetes medications prescribed at discharge |
| Provider and/or electronic medical record clinical decision support prescribes targeted generic education content | ||
| High-Tech | Generic education content prescribed for delivery at bedside on TV or tablet computer from web-based platform | Individualized education delivered via an interactive patient engagement platform |
| Content auto-directed to learner based on embedded survey responses | ||
| “App” for telehealth coaching prescribed, |