abs said:The passport which is just a small card same size as a credit card has the details of the insulin and your details. It is useful to have to be able to show say a ambulance etc if needed etc its not just for pharmacies to be able to see the correct insulin is given out. I've seen wrong insulin precribed in the past by GPs and the pharmacist question it but if its a Locam then they will not know what is your normal medication.
AMBrennan said:Insulin passport would catch prescribing errors as well as dispensing errors, and I personally have experienced way more of the former than I'd like (mostly because it's... Less well trained receptionists that seem to process prescription requests which the doctors sign off blindly - e.g. there are literally dozens of "Lantus" items on their system, and if you get a vial instead of a profiled pen you are in trouble)
Of course, that only helps in you are unable to check whether the insulin is the correct one for you, but in that case you probably shouldn't be managing your own injections anyway.
As for emergency treatment, I have actually discussed that with my consultant - if you are unconscious they put you on an Apidra drip, and she did concede that carrying an insulin passport would not change treatment at all. If anything, I'd say that knowing your insulin doses would be more helpful than the type.
The patient was given the wrong insulin by the pharmacist (NovoRapid instead of NovoMix 30), which resulted in significant hypoglycaemia associated with fall and confusion. Fortunately the patient was found by the daughter and brought to hospital.
The patient was prescribed and administrated the wrong type of insulin. Prescribed and administered Humalog (rapid) insulin twice a day and instead of Humalog Mix insulin twice a day. Episodes of severe and persistent hypoglycaemia.
The patient was an inpatient on [a ward]. She attended a drop in session at the diabetes clinic on [date]. Observations were stable. She returned a few days later. The insulin pen she had been given to taken home and which she had been using contained the wrong insulin. The pens were very similar in colour - grey/purple
AMBrennan said:I am specifically referring to cases where the patient is unconscious, and thus unable to manage their own insulin injections - otherwise you could just ask what insulin they are using, making the passport unnecessary.
I don't think that insulin users are being singled out, except in that there have been far too many errors.Surely any mix up of medication is serious why is it just insulin users being singled out?
Two common errors have been identified: • the inappropriate use of non-insulin (IV) syringes, which are marked in ml and not in insulin units; • the use of abbreviations such as ‘U’ or ‘IU’ for units. When abbreviations are added to the intended dose, the dose may be misread, e.g. 10U is read as 100.
Some of these errors have resulted from insufficient training in the use of insulin by healthcare professional Patient safety incidents Between August 2003 and August 2009 the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) received 3,881 wrong dose incident reports involving insulin. These included one death and one severe harm incident due to 10-fold dosing errors from abbreviating the term ‘Unit’. Three deaths and 17 other incidents between January 2005 and July 2009 were also reported where an intravenous syringe was used to measure and administer insulin.
Yes, that was my original point - the carrying an insulin passport will not change treatment at all.I would think that if you were unconscious that what insulin you use is of little importance, if you are taken to hospital and found to be hyperglycaemic could they not administer any type of insulin in an emergency?
A nice idea but the insulin passport does not have dosage information - just the type of insulin.If I were unconscious I wouldn't be able to tell someone but if they gave me an insulin dose commensurate with the average for my weight it would be far too high. Insulin passport would be very useful here.
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