1. Development of a protocol for capillary blood glucose testing in nursing home and rehabilitation settings.
- Author
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Mader SL, Fuglee KA, Allen DS, Werner LR, Wanlass WA, Pagel KJ, Beliel KL, McEuen JA, Stephens EA, Allison NL, McWhorter KA, and Vandling JE
- Subjects
- Aged, Algorithms, Capillaries, Female, Humans, Male, Monitoring, Physiologic methods, Oregon, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Blood Glucose analysis, Clinical Protocols, Diabetes Mellitus blood, Monitoring, Physiologic standards, Nursing Homes organization & administration, Rehabilitation Centers organization & administration
- Abstract
Objectives: To develop an algorithm to standardize capillary blood glucose (CBG) testing in nursing home and rehabilitation patients., Design: Descriptive study in which an interdisciplinary team from a nursing home, a rehabilitation center, and a diabetes mellitus care program developed and tested a protocol to standardize diabetes management parameters and CBG testing frequency., Setting: Department of Veterans Affairs nursing home and rehabilitation unit., Participants: One hundred one patients admitted to the units during the 6-month study period who had orders for CBG testing., Intervention: Use of a standardized CBG testing protocol., Measurements: Use of management goal, use of CBG testing protocol, total CBG tests/month., Results: One hundred one subjects received orders for CBG testing; 72 (72%) received orders for a management goal, and 69 (69%) received orders to use the CBG protocol. Of these 69 patients, 22 met their CBG goals and were advanced to less-frequent CBG testing using the protocol, and 15 did not meet their CBG goals and were not advanced. An additional 15 patients were advanced to less-frequent CBG testing but not using the protocol. In all, 54 of 69 patients (78%) were advanced or could have been advanced by protocol to less-frequent CBG testing. Total CBG testing per month did not change before, during, or after the study period., Conclusion: This protocol would be useful in long-term care facilities and in other congregate living settings where patients with diabetes mellitus have staff assisting with their diabetes management. Barriers to successful implementation are discussed.
- Published
- 2006
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