Effects of a Dedicated Inpatient Diabetes Management Service on Glycemic Control in a Community Hospital Setting

Author:

Demidowich Andrew P.12ORCID,Batty Kristine1,Love Teresa3,Sokolinsky Sam4,Grubb Lisa5,Miller Catherine6,Raymond Larry3,Nazarian Jeanette1,Ahmed M. Shafeeq5,Rotello Leo7,Zilbermint Mihail27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Johns Hopkins Community Physicians at Howard County General Hospital (HCGH), Division of Hospital Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Columbia, MD, USA

2. Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

3. Rehab Services, Diabetes Management & The Center for Wound Healing, HCGH, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Columbia, MD, USA

4. JHHS Quality and Clinical Analytics, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

5. Johns Hopkins Armstrong Institute at HCGH, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Columbia, MD, USA

6. Division of Nursing – Critical Care, HCGH, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Columbia, MD, USA

7. Johns Hopkins Community Physicians at Suburban Hospital, Division of Hospital Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Bethesda, MD, USA

Abstract

Background: Community hospitals account for over 84% of all hospitals and over 94% of hospital admissions in the United States. In academic settings, implementation of an Inpatient Diabetes Management Service (IDMS) model of care has been shown to reduce rates of hyper- and hypoglycemia, hospital length of stay (LOS), and associated hospital costs. However, few studies to date have evaluated the implementation of a dedicated IDMS in a community hospital setting. Methods: This retrospective study examined the effects of changing the model of inpatient diabetes consultations from a local, private endocrine practice to a full-time endocrine hospitalist on glycemic control, LOS, and 30-day readmission rates in a 267-bed community hospital. Results: Overall diabetes patient days for the hospital were similar pre- and post-intervention (20,191 vs 20,262); however, the volume of patients seen by IDMS increased significantly after changing models. Rates of hyperglycemia decreased both among patients seen by IDMS (53.8% to 42.5%, P < .0001) and those not consulted on by IDMS (33.2% to 29.9%; P < .0001). When examined over time, rates of hypoglycemia steadily decreased in the 24 months after dedicated IDMS initiation ( P = .02); no such time effect was seen prior to IDMS ( P = .34). LOS and 30DRR were not significantly different between IDMS models. Conclusions: Implementation of an endocrine hospitalist-based IDMS at a community hospital was associated with significantly decreased hyperglycemia, while avoiding concurrent increases in hypoglycemia. Further studies are needed to investigate whether these effects are associated with improvements in clinical outcomes, patient or staff satisfaction scores, or total cost of care.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Bioengineering,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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