With the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) releasing its quality measures on glycemic management, hospitals will soon track and publicly report rates of:
The first rule measures prolonged, untreated rates of hyperglycemia in the hospital, and the second aims to prevent medication-induced hypoglycemia during a hospital stay by capturing data on patients with severe hypoglycemia.
With such measures, CMS is choosing to acknowledge the serious problem of severe hypo- and hyperglycemia among hospitalized patients. With nearly 40% of all patients requiring insulin therapy during their hospital stay, this is a complex problem that also affects nurses, dietitians, and certified diabetes care and education specialist clinicians, and therefore requires a complex solution. In order to provide the best patient care and ensure proper insulin dosing for patients, there needs to be cooperation between the entire care team.
Three Heads Are Better Than One
As a registered nurse and certified diabetes care and education specialist, I know firsthand that proper insulin dosing and patient education are foundational to patient safety and predictably good outcomes. Expert knowledge and coordination are required to accurately monitor blood glucose levels, nutritional intake, patient status, insulin titration and other treatments that affect blood sugar for patients in need of insulin therapy. Dietitians provide expert advice on how to meet nutritional and metabolic needs while minimizing variability in blood glucose fluctuations. In addition to physicians and pharmacists, a well-rounded expert care team for patients requiring insulin consists of three heads: patient care nurses, dietitians, and certified diabetes care and education specialists. Each discipline provides the care team with a unique perspective and expert knowledge that benefits the patient, reduces adverse events, and improves the overall quality of care.
It is important for nurses and this entire care team to be educated on the goals of the new glycemic CMS measures in order to provide the best patient care. Here’s what you need to know:
Nurses cannot improve patient outcomes solely on their own. By uniting the entire care team of nurses, dietitians and certified diabetes care and education specialists, hospitals can work towards the goal of making preventable incidences of hyper- and hypoglycemia as a result of medication errors a never event.
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The eGlycemic Management System® is a modularized solution for glycemic management across the care continuum that includes Glucommander™. Glucommander™ is a prescription-only software medical device for glycemic management intended to evaluate current as well as cumulative patient blood glucose values coupled with patient information including age, weight and height, and, based on the aggregate of these measurement parameters, whether one or many, recommend an IV dosage of insulin, glucose or saline or a subcutaneous basal and bolus insulin dosing recommendation to adjust and maintain the blood glucose level towards a configurable physician- determined target range. Glucommander™ is indicated for use in adult and pediatric (ages 2-17 years) patients. The measurements and calculations generated are intended to be used by qualified and trained medical personnel in evaluating patient conditions in conjunction with clinical history, symptoms, and other diagnostic measurements, as well as the medical professional’s clinical judgement. No medical decision should be based solely on the recommended guidance provided by this software program.
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