Key Points
- Monitor patients
- Identify elevated blood glucose levels
- Establish a multidisciplinary team
- Implement structured protocols
- Create educational programs
- Plan the patient's transition to outpatient care
Medicare paid hospitals close to $50 million in 2007 to treat avoidable cases of diabetic ketoacidosis, a life-threatening
condition that too often is acquired during a patient's hospital stay.
 Kasey Thompson, PharmD
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Beginning Oct. 1, the agency no longer pays for blood conditions caused by poor inpatient glycemic control, including diabetic
ketoacidosis, diabetes-related hyperosmolarity, and hypoglycemia coma. Health-system pharmacists can play an important role
in avoiding these conditions by insisting on proper protocols.
"Pharmacists should be actively involved in monitoring patients and providing advice or deciding on the appropriate drug therapy,"
said Kasey K. Thompson, PharmD, director of the practice standards and quality division at the American Society of Health-System
Pharmacists.
"The key change is that CMS now will not pay for certain preventable events. The decision has the attention of hospital executives,
and they will likely be calling on pharmacists to be part of the solution, helping prevent patient harm and improve patient
outcomes, and achieve full payment from CMS and other third-party payers," he said. The cost of inpatient diabetes care is about $40 billion a year. In recognition of that, the American Association of Clinical
Endocrinologists (AACE) recently issued a position paper stating improved inpatient blood glucose control is needed to reduce
complications and infections, shorten the length of hospital stays, and reduce costs. The AACE says that for every two patients
in the hospital with known diabetes, there may be one more patient with newly-noted hyperglycemia.
Blood glucose levels do not have to be extremely high for hyperglycemia to be dangerous. Studies show blood glucose levels
consistently as high as 150 mg per dL can be dangerous, possibly resulting in sepsis. This has been known for some time.
A seminal study reported in the Nov. 8, 2001, issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, titled "Intensive Insulin Therapy in Critically Ill Patients," found that "(i)ntensive insulin therapy to maintain blood glucose
at or below 110 mg per dL reduces morbidity and mortality among critically ill patients in the surgical intensive care unit."
What's more, according to Almut G. Winterstein, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacy health care administration at the University
of Florida Shands Hospital in Gainesville, Fla. Although clinicians have long recognized the need to treat hypoglycemia (low
blood glucose), the importance of hyperglycemia (high blood glucose) control for inpatients remains less clear.
"The problem is a fear of overtreating with insulin," she said. "Providers are often more afraid of doing something wrong
that results in a problem than doing nothing. But the hyperglycemia that may result from undertreatment is a significant threat.
We know now that it is not only the long-term management of blood glucose but the short-term management that can determine
morbidity and mortality in patients."
Conditions are preventable
These facts and the CMS action require the implementation of specific guidelines and protocols, with aggressive encouragement
by health-system pharmacists, said R. Keith Campbell, PharmD, associate dean and professor of pharmacotherapy at Washington
State University.
 CMS Outlines Cost and Codes Related to Poor Inpatient Glycemic Control
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"One significant factor has been when and how often blood sugar has been checked, especially for patients with a history of
diabetes," Campbell said. "Previously undiagnosed diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance are common in hospitalized patients.
Blood glucose concentrations at the time of hospital admission can serve as markers for adverse outcomes in hospital patients.
But frequent bedside blood glucose monitoring, especially after meals, plays an important role."