310 likes | 566 Views
Objectives. Following the program the learnerwill be able to:Recognize one new teaching skillIdentify weight based insulin dosesDiscuss resources available for patients in our community. Knowledge Deficit . There is a knowledge deficit in diabetes treatment. It is called clin
E N D
1. What’s New in Diabetes Education? Presented by
Lisa Kiblinger, RN, MS, CDE
Vicki Karnes, RN
Georgia Free Clinic Network Conference
May 3, 2010
2. Objectives Following the program the learner
will be able to:
Recognize one new teaching skill
Identify weight based insulin doses
Discuss resources available for
patients in our community
3. Knowledge Deficit There is a knowledge deficit in diabetes
treatment. It is called clinical inertia.
People at risk for diabetes should be
identified early, treated aggressively
and monitored regularly.
Diabetes out-of-control exists in 90% of
patients under the care of a practitioner.
Diabetes in control reduces risks to near
normal levels.
4. Who Should be Tested and When? Adults without symptoms who are
overweight or obese and have one or
more additional risk factors for diabetes.
Without Risk Factors: Testing should
begin at age 45.
If results of testing are normal, repeat at
least every 3 years.
5. Identifying Those at Risk Body Mass Index kg/m2
> 25 * Caucasian, Hispanic, African-
American
> 23 Asian American
> 26 Pacific Islanders
Age over 45
* Note: Weight shown on the American Diabetes Association handouts for the public indicates risk begins at a BMI of 30.
6. Risk Factors for Diabetes Family history ?
Gestational diabetes ?
Obesity / abdominal fat distribution ?
Sedentary lifestyle ?
Smoking ?
Low birth weight or high birth weight ?
Depression ?
Antipsychotic medications ?
7. Additional Risk Factors Dietary Considerations
Saturated fats ?
Glycemic load ?
Cereal fiber / whole grain ?
Low fat dairy products ?
High fructose corn syrup ?
Sugar-sweetened beverages ?
Alcohol ?
8. Psychosocial Risk Factors Poverty
Education
Food insecurity
Food environment
Neighborhood factors
9. New Tool for Diagnosis
2010 ADA Clinic Practice Guideline
Hemoglobin A1c > 6.5 % = Diabetes
Hemoglobin A1c 5.7 to 6.4% = Pre-diabetes
Impaired Glucose Tolerance (IGT) and Impaired Fasting Glucose (IFG) values remain the same.
Note: Health plans may not cover the Hemoglobin A1c blood test. Home
test kits are available for $9 (results in 5 days) or $29 (results in 5 min.)
10. Can Diabetes be Prevented? Exercise 150 minutes/week
Limit Saturated Fat
Increase Fiber
Increase Fruits/Vegetables
Limit Alcohol
Moderate Weight Loss: 7 to 10%
11. Motivational Interviewing How do I get my smoking, drinking,
obese, sedentary, vegetable-phobic
patient to take better care of himself?
O.A.R.S. Strategies
Open-ended questions
Affirmation
Reflective listening
Summarize
12. Conversation Maps
13. Glucose Control Patient-driven
Food choices, portion size, exercise
Monitoring Goals: fasting < 130, 2 hrs after meal < 180
Teach est. Avg. Glucose: A1c 7% = 154 mg/dL
Obst. Sleep Apnea
screening
14. Insulin Types Basal: Lantus, Levemir
Humulin N, Novolin N
Bolus: Novolog, Humalog, Apidra (rapid)
Novolin R, Humulin R (must wait 30
min. to eat)
Premixed doses:
70/30, 75/25, 50/50
(NPH / Regular or Rapid)
15. Weight-Based Insulin Dosingin Type 1 Diabetes In most patients the “Total Daily Dose” (TDD) of insulin can be calculated by weight:
Weight in kg divided by 2 = TDD
Insulin Sensitivity Factor = 1700*/TDD
ISF is the estimated point drop in BG per one unit of insulin.
Insulin to Carb (I:C) Ratio = 600*/TDD
I:C ratio = grams of carb for 1 unit. If I:C is 15, then before 45 gram carb meal, 3 units of insulin is given.
* When using rapid-acting insulin
17. Monitoring Options for Low-income Individuals Monthly Cost of Test Strips
18. Learning How Actions Make a Difference: Testing in Pairs Monitor glucose before and after a specific meal or event. For example, before and 2 hrs after lunch.
Write down the results.
Do this for the same meal/ event for 7 days.
Notice how levels changed.
What can be learned from the changes?
19. Monitoring FrequencyType 1 Diabetes Basal/Bolus Insulin Regimen
Bolus Units based on Carb Count
or Sliding Scale
20. Additional Monitoring Frequency have symptoms of hypoglycemia
have infection or on a sick day
travelling or are under stress
undergoing adjustments in medication, nutrition and/or physical activity
entering a new life experience, i.e. going away to school, starting a new job
pregnant or planning to become pregnant
21. Glucose Monitoring Supplies Roche: ACCU-CHEK meters/test strips now only to Direct Relief USA Clinics (4 in GA?)
Abbott Diabetes Care: 400 strips (4 months) for those on insulin, must document use
National Association of Free Clinics
BG Monitor Company Representative
Retail: ReliOn, WaveSense
22. National Association of Free Clinics Available to Member Clinics
Test Strips
TrueRead 9.85 per box of 50
Bionime 11.00 per box of 50
WaveSense Keynote 10.50 per box of 50
Meters
Free meter with every 4 boxes ordered
First time order: Meters as needed for $1.00
23. Handout: Saving Money on Rx Drugs and Supplies Free Medications
New GA Partnership for Caring Applic. 3/2010,
Merck is only PAP that doesn’t require proof of
financial need. Metformin now free at Publix.
Free Supplies: Insulin syringes from BD Medical, Diabetes Id Necklace: www.diabeteswellness.net
Discount Medications: CVS only
program to offer Tramadol for $10 / 90 days
24. National Diabetes Education Program More than Partner Organizations
Websites
National Diabetes Education Program
Diabetes at Work
Better Diabetes Care (HCPs)
Campaigns
“Control Your Diabetes for Life”
“Small Steps, Big Rewards, Prevent Diabetes”
“One Call, One Click”: NDEP Promotion
Toolkits
“Road to Health” and “Power to Prevent”
25. Multicultural Education Materials Consider literacy skills in any language!
National Diabetes Education Program
25 copies free of flyers, brochures
Available in 15 languages
Nutrition Education for New Americans
Download handouts in 36 languages
Drug Companies: Many provide diabetes
education brochures in Spanish
26. Diabetes Education Classes Recognized Programs (ADA, IHS, AADE)
Not covered by Medicaid
Medicare 20% copay applies to10 hours
when diagnosed then 2 hours/year.
Diabetes Association of Atlanta: Sliding Scale
Community Health Centers: West End Med. Center
Georgia Medical Care Foundation:
Classes in the community setting targeting African-
American and Latino Medicare beneficiaries.
27. Other Diabetes Education Programs Emory Latino Diabetes Education Program
Conversation Map Group: www.healthyinteractions.com
Cooperative Extension Service
Online Sample Calorie-Count Menus: www.fcs.uga.edu
Will Provide Agent for Community Classes
Support Group Meetings
Center for Visually Impaired Diabetes Services
Church Programs: House of Grace (Decatur)
28. Multimedia Educational Resources Television: dLife on CNBC
Sunday, 7 pm ET
Videos: “Small Steps to Help You
Manage Your Diabetes”
Internet Videos: “Diabetes balance
and health: my personal roadmap”
https://members.kaiserpermanente.org
29. Find a Diabetes Educator American Association of Diabetes
Educators website: www.diabeteseducator.org/DiabetesEducation/Find.html
30. Review Diabetes can be prevented
Patients decide on treatment to be
followed
Insulin can bring down any eAG
Tools can help you help your patients
Resources are available to you and
your patients
31. Resources Hospital/Orders Resource
http://diabetes.gha.org/Toolkit/index.asp
Insulin
www.effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/repFiles/Insulin_
Consumer_Web.pdf
Diabetes Education http://ndep.nih.gov/publications/index.aspx?keyword=Toolkit
Sleep Apnea http://www.edward.org/workfiles/sleep%20center%20Berlin %20Sleep%20Eval.pdf
32. Thank You!
We appreciate your
time and attention