Would you have given the meds??

Nurses General Nursing

Published

okay- here's the situation

69 yo female in because of weakness, fell at home after being at rehab for 3 weeks. normal aging issues- cad, htn, but completely aao x3-also iddm. offgoing nurse gives me report, says pt's fsbs @ 0600 was 39- she gave oj and graham crackers- rechecked the fsbs- it was 50- gave another oj. rechecked 105. pt states she was a little shaky and a bit diaphortic- but otherwise ok- that she knows it was because she took her hs insulin and didn't eat.

so she has metformin and actos ordered for 0800. i recheck her fsbs-it was 127- she's eating- so i give it but not her 70/30.

pt was fine all morning. in the mean time, i am floated to icu and get a call about 3 hrs later stating the md wants to talk to me.

i get there, he says did i plan on trying to kill his pt..because that is what would have happened. i explained what had happened- then reiterated that fact the the pt stated she had not eaten dinner. he freaked!! said he was going to my nm and i would not be taking care of any of his pts again.

so, it is not so much i think i was wrong...the problem came down to the fact that the offgoing rn did not notify him that the pts fsbs was 39 @ 0600- he said if he had know he would have given the order to hold all hypoglycemics and insulin...

what do you all think???

Specializes in PICU, NICU, L&D, Public Health, Hospice.

Not every nurse has the luxury of a 10-15 min call back time for docs.

Specializes in ED/trauma.

you have to give the scheduled DM meds as ordered, as long as the patient has eaten & has a normal bs, especially if they have some other kind of acute illness going on (bs will be harder to control), why does your hospital not have protocols in place for this type of thing? We have a long list of standing orders at our disposal for just this type of situation, if bs is okay always give scheduled po and sq meds. if low should give s/s as indicated, if very low give D50, if semi low recheck after eating then do this, when to start a gtt... and so on. You should not hold 70/30 for a bs of 127, but sounds like a lot of miscommunication went on, good luck to you, & if you don't yet have protocols in place such as this, then please push for them, it is so important to maintain very tight bs control, especially when their is other things going on, it only takes a few severe hyperglycemia episodes to cause severe permanent damage.also, it really doesn't matter if type 1 or 2 at this point, most diabetics require, or are treated with insulin in the hospital, and obviously her bs have been high in the past if get 70/30, we need to control the high bs the quickest way possible and then try to wean her to po if possible

Specializes in er, pediatric er.

I think your doctor was way all out of line. If pt's bg was 127, i see no reason to hold oral hypoglycemics. I would have probably held the insulin, but not the oral meds.

We have a hypoglycemia protocol. BS of

Specializes in Certified Diabetes Educator.
Not every nurse has the luxury of a 10-15 min call back time for docs.

wow. Does your particular nurse practice act protect you then?

We have a hypoglycemia protocol. BS of

Wow. BS of 65 seems kind of high. My last FBS was 66 (at my yearly physical). Granted, since I'm not a diabetic, this is a glucose level that I can tolerate, and am probably used to. But technically BS > 70 is normal, and for alert persons a little under that, a quick carb will do the trick.

Is D50 as fun as a cookie?

(yes, being silly. not mocking a protocol--I understand that many people can't tolerate BS this low.)

Specializes in Medical.

i have been struck while reading this thread by the confusion about diabetes classification. to clarify:

a person with type 1 or insulin-dependent diabetes does not make insulin. their bgl is more prone to fluctuation when they are sick or have changes in routine (like fasting, changes in diet and exercise), and they are at risk or dka if insulin is insufficient; you should almost never withhold insulin from someone with t1/iddm - if they are fasting or have a hypo they need a reduced dose of insulin and closer than usual monitoring +/- an iv dexrose infusion.

a person with type 2 or non-insulin-dependent diabetesmay be managed by diet alone, with oral ypoglycemic meds, or with a combination of ohgas and insulin (treatment with insulin alone is rare). though they may be brittle, people with t2/niddm tend to have more stable bgls. they are not at risk of dka but may develop a non-ketotic version of hyperglycemia (hhs) if they have untreated hyperglycemia for a prolonged period of time.

on my unit we only give 50% dextrose to hypoglycemic patients who are unable to safely swallow, both because 50% is harsh on peripheral veins and because the quick upswing in bgl is more likely to need further intervention than the gentler increase of oral intervention.

as an endo cns i would have given the prescribed medications. i would also have spoken with the patient about why she skipped dinner and explained why this was dangerous; asked her to let nursing staff know if she did this again, so we could monitor her more closely; documented this in her notes; and asked whoever i was working with to check her bgl more often than usual if i was unable to do so myself.

i would have mentioned it to the doctor if i saw him, but as the hypo occurred overnight and has now resolved, following intervention as dictated in the policy, i would not page him about it - he can look at the chart. had he rung me i would have told him that if he wants me to do something other than the protocol when caring for his patients he can indicate a treatment plan in the notes or talk to the unit about changing the policy.

A person with type 1 or insulin-dependent diabetes does not make insulin.

A person with type 2 or non-insulin-dependent diabetesmay be managed by diet alone, with oral ypoglycemic meds, or with a combination of OHGAs and insulin (treatment with insulin alone is rare). .

Thanks Talaxandra! Your post is great!

I think the confusion lies with the classification of diabetes. Type 1 diabetes usually has an autoimmune etiology where beta cells are destroyed leading to total insulin deficiency. Type 1 diabetes ALWAYS equals IDDM. Type 2 diabetes is a disease of progressive insulin resistance related to genetics and lifestyle. Type 2 MAY lead to a dependent insulin requirement, but the course of the disease is very different, and the consequences of missing a dose aren't usually as severe. Type 2 diabetics may also present with DKA in some situations. Type 2 DM USUALLY equals NIDDM, but MAY progress to insulin dependency. This dependency also manifests with less labile blood sugars than Type 1 diabetics. And it takes much longer to get to that point. (Type 1 develops over a very short, symptomatic course) Basically, once the PO meds stop benefitting the type 2 diabetic (or the pt can't tolerate them for other reasons), they may switch over to all-insulin.

I've posted a few links. The first talks about different classifications of diabetes. It was written in 1998, and I'm sure many things are different now, though I believe the major classification remains the same--that is, Type 1 is preferable to IDDM. The other article presents case studies of type 2 patients who presented to the hospital in DKA.

http://www.aafp.org/afp/981015ap/mayfield.html

http://clinical.diabetesjournals.org/content/22/4/198.full

If the OP is still around--you say in your initial post that the patient had "IDDM". Do you know if the patient had type 1 or type 2 diabetes? If it was type 1, then the insulin should have been given, and the doctor seriously needs to read a book (especially because his pt is on oral hypoglycemics).

Specializes in PICU, NICU, L&D, Public Health, Hospice.

"Originally Posted by tewdlesviewpost.gif

Not every nurse has the luxury of a 10-15 min call back time for docs.

wow. Does your particular nurse practice act protect you then? "

Not saying that you practice medicine if the doc does not call you back in 10-15 minutes...just saying that routinely receiving return calls from MDs within 10-15 minutes is a luxury that many nurses do not have. Nurse Practice act sure does protect you then...even if you wait an hour...call someone else, wait 30 minutes...all covered...but that was not what you were assuming...right?

Specializes in Med-Surg, LTC, Rehab.

Question: What if the patient hadn't eaten? Would the PO meds and the insulin be held?

Specializes in ER/Trauma.

The BS was 127... not 27.

I can understand MD being miffed at not being notified for a BS of 39 (and no, I wouldn't have given anything PO for that - stat IV D50!) ... but I see no reason for you to hold the AM meds, particularly if pt. was eating!

cheers,

a BS of 39 (and no, I wouldn't have given anything PO for that - stat IV D50!)

If patient is alert, I'm going the PO route. If they're not alert, I'm going the IV/subQ route. (As long as I'm not violating hospital policy doing so.)

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