Hypoglycaemia: Fingerprick glucose tests at triage decreased time to nursing intervention
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Clinical bottom line (level 2b)
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Diabetic patients who had fingerprick glucose estimations in ER triage received nursing and medical interventions more quickly than those without.
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Time to final disposition (home or admission) was not significantly different between the groups.
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Degroote and Pieper:
Journal of Emergency Nurse
1993;
19:
131-133
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Expires
August 2003
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The study
Unblinded ?concealed randomised
trial
with
intention-to-treat
Setting: Emergency department in US hospital
68 patients
(aged
mean 57 years,
56%
female)
history of diabetes and attending ER for any reason
Excluded if
<18 years old
Control Group: (n = 38, 38 analysed):
Usual care
Experimental Group: (n = 30, 30 analysed):
Finger-prick glucose assessment as part of triage
100% followed for
?
The evidence
| Outcome |
Control Group (SD) |
Experimental Group (SD) |
Mean Difference (95% CI) |
| Time to nurse intervention (minutes)
|
24
()
|
164
()
|
140
( to )
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| Time to medical intervention (minutes)
|
89
()
|
165
()
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76.3
( to )
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| Time to discharge (minutes)
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231
()
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278
()
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47
( to )
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Comments
- Time may not relate to quality of care received
- Information not provided in enough detail to assess the breadth of confidence-intervals involved
Citation
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Degroote
NE,
and
Pieper
B:
Blood glucose monitoring at triage.
Journal of Emergency Nurse
1993;
19:
131-133
Contributor: Bob Phillips and Clare Wotton,
August 1999
Reviewer: Tadao Okada
Clinical Question.
| Patient |
diabetic in emergency department |
| Intervention or Exposure |
fingerprick glucose |
| Outcome |
time to intervention; time to home |
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