Journal for healthcare quality : official publication of the National Association for Healthcare Quality
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Comparative Study
Reducing Diabetic Ketoacidosis Intensive Care Unit Admissions Through an Electronic Health Record-Driven, Standardized Care Pathway.
Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a common condition, with wide variation in admission location and clinical practice. We aimed to decrease intensive care unit (ICU) admission for DKA by implementing a standardized, electronic health record-driven clinical care pathway that used subcutaneous insulin, rather than a continuous insulin infusion, for patients with nonsevere DKA. This is a retrospective, observational preintervention to postintervention study of 214 hospital admissions for DKA that evaluated the effect of our intervention on clinical, safety, and cost outcomes. ⋯ Time to initiation of basal insulin increased from 18.19 ± 1.25 hours to 22.47 ± 1.76 hours (p = .05) and reopening of the anion gap increased from 4.7% to 13.9% (p = .02). No changes in ED length of stay (LOS), hospital LOS, hypoglycemia, treatment-induced hypokalemia, 30-day hospital readmission, or inpatient mortality were observed. The implementation of a standardized DKA care pathway using subcutaneous insulin for nonsevere DKA resulted in decreased ICU use and increased diabetes education, without affecting patient safety.