Study on Insulin Safety Clinical Audit in a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital

Indranil Mitra (1) , Arpan Dutta Roy (2) , Sayantan Ghosh (3) , Prolay Paul (4) , Suchanda Gadre (5) , Shounak Biswas (6) , Mrinmoy Mitra (7) , Ritam Chakraborty (8)
(1) 1. HOD Emergency Department, Ruby General Hospital, Kolkata. 2. Chief Of Clinical Pharmacology Department, Ruby General Hospital, Kolkata. , Saudi Arabia
(2) 2. Chief Of Clinical Pharmacology Department, Ruby General Hospital, Kolkata. , India
(3) Clinical Pharmacologist, Co-ordinator ADR Monitoring Centre, AMRI Hospital, Mukundapur, Kolkata. Orcid id 0000-0003-3729-4834 , India
(4) 4. Clinical Pharmacologist, Narayana Superspeciality Hospital, Howrah. Orcid id 0000-0001-7042-3314 , India
(5) 5. Medical Superintendent, Narayana Superspeciality Hospital, Howrah. , India
(6) Senior resident, Department of Community Medicine, Governement of West bengal. , India
(7) Consultant Pulmonologist, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine Specialist, AMRI Hospital, Mukundapur, Kolkata. , India
(8) 8. Consultant Critical Care & Pulmonologist, AMRI Hospital, Mukundapur, Kolkata. , India

Abstract

Insulin therapy is an integral part of diabetes management in both type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In T1DM, insulin therapy is required from the time of diagnosis and continued to be required over the lifetime of an individual. In T2DM, insulin therapy is used either during acute illness associated with hyperglycaemia and hyperglycaemic emergencies, peri-operatively, or during pregnancy and lactation. Long-term insulin therapy in T2DM is indicated following the failure of combination anti-diabetic therapy with oral or non-insulin injectables to maintain optimal glycaemic control.The pattern of anti-diabetic treatment (especially in type 2 diabetes mellitus) tends to change markedly along with the duration of diabetes including the use of Insulin in its treatment. Studies have reported the benefits of insulin in helping to achieve glycaemic control and reduce the risk of long-term diabetes complications. The data was collected and analysed for compliance and the errors were detected. Corrective actions were taken and a re-audit was done to check the compliance. The implementation of a structured documentation form together with training measures for health-care-professionals led to less documentation errors and safe management of glycemic control in hospitalized patients in a short time follow-up.

Full text article

Generated from XML file

Authors

Indranil Mitra
maisaa.awad16@gmail.com (Primary Contact)
Arpan Dutta Roy
Sayantan Ghosh
Prolay Paul
Suchanda Gadre
Shounak Biswas
Mrinmoy Mitra
Ritam Chakraborty
Mitra, I. ., Roy, A. D. ., Ghosh, S. ., Paul, P. ., Gadre, S. ., Biswas, S. ., Mitra, M. ., & Chakraborty, R. . (2022). Study on Insulin Safety Clinical Audit in a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital. Journal of Current Medical Research and Opinion, 5(06), 1271–1275. https://doi.org/10.52845/CMRO/2022/5-6-4
Copyright and license info is not available

Article Details