garrybrown70
Newbie
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garrybrown70 said:Hi
I am type 1, i went into hospital for an operation and was on a sliding scale, my question is how did i go into ketoacidosis and end up in intensive care.
Should i sue the hospital.
Well, no. Sliding scale continuously adjusts insulin infusion rates based on BG which is measured every hour; if you eat a lot of carbs (note that it's frequently used alongside glucose IV) then BG goes up, is detected within an hour and the insulin infusion rate is adjusted to bring it back down. Read all about it here.as I understand it assumes a set amount of carbs in a meal which I can't imagine a hospital managing well
The official recommendation is that patients should continue managing their own medication whenever possibly; however, in certain situations that may it be possible (e.g. NBM for surgery)I would have thought it would be better for any one that has to spend time in hospital to be in control of their own medication, but now they take it all away from you and make a right old mess of things.
AlexMBrennan said:Well, no. Sliding scale continuously adjusts insulin infusion rates based on BG which is measured every hour; if you eat a lot of carbs (note that it's frequently used alongside glucose IV) then BG goes up, is detected within an hour and the insulin infusion rate is adjusted to bring it back down. Read all about it here.as I understand it assumes a set amount of carbs in a meal which I can't imagine a hospital managing well
There is nothing inherently wrong with the sliding scale regime that causes DKA (note that binging on carbs can't cause DKA to begin with - harmfully high BG, sure, but not DKA) and I suspect a failure to adequately monitor BG and/or to correctly apply the sliding scale rules.
The official recommendation is that patients should continue managing their own medication whenever possibly; however, in certain situations that may it be possible (e.g. NBM for surgery)I would have thought it would be better for any one that has to spend time in hospital to be in control of their own medication, but now they take it all away from you and make a right old mess of things.
Hi Gary,garrybrown70 said:Hi
I am type 1, i went into hospital for an operation and was on a sliding scale, my question is how did i go into ketoacidosis and end up in intensive care.
Should i sue the hospital.
Regards
Garry
the_anticarb said:The food in hospital is usually a joke for diabetics which does not help. Just spent three days inside, and bg's went higher than normal thanks to the NHS hospital diet of white bread and jam for breakfast, more bread for lunch (sandwiches) and tempting dinners such as pie with no veg (just a slice of pie on a plate) and sponge with custard for dessert. After two days they managed to get the dietician to provide me with the carb count of all the hospital meals but this was 2 days into a 3 day stay so for 2/3 of the time I was guessing my carbs. The nurses would ask me 'what's your insulin dose for your meals' and i'd have to explain time and time again that it DEPENDED.
Luckily they let me do all my own testing and injecting, suprising as I was at the famous hospital that was in the news about a couple of years ago because patients were being killed by someone going round injecting them with insulin, so all insulin is supposed to be kept under lock and key now. Which doesn't help us diabetics.
Anyway if I were you I'd definitely make a complaint and get it investigated. Good luck.
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