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New Insulin Delivery Recommendations

Frid, Anders H. LU ; Kreugel, Gillian ; Grassi, Giorgio ; Halimi, Serge ; Hicks, Debbie ; Hirsch, Laurence J. ; Smith, Mike J. ; Wellhoener, Regine ; Bode, Bruce W. and Hirsch, Irl B. , et al. (2016) In Mayo Clinic Proceedings 91(9). p.1231-1255
Abstract

Many primary care professionals manage injection or infusion therapies in patients with diabetes. Few published guidelines have been available to help such professionals and their patients manage these therapies. Herein, we present new, practical, and comprehensive recommendations for diabetes injections and infusions. These recommendations were informed by a large international survey of current practice and were written and vetted by 183 diabetes experts from 54 countries at the Forum for Injection Technique and Therapy: Expert Recommendations (FITTER) workshop held in Rome, Italy, in 2015. Recommendations are organized around the themes of anatomy, physiology, pathology, psychology, and technology. Key among the recommendations are... (More)

Many primary care professionals manage injection or infusion therapies in patients with diabetes. Few published guidelines have been available to help such professionals and their patients manage these therapies. Herein, we present new, practical, and comprehensive recommendations for diabetes injections and infusions. These recommendations were informed by a large international survey of current practice and were written and vetted by 183 diabetes experts from 54 countries at the Forum for Injection Technique and Therapy: Expert Recommendations (FITTER) workshop held in Rome, Italy, in 2015. Recommendations are organized around the themes of anatomy, physiology, pathology, psychology, and technology. Key among the recommendations are that the shortest needles (currently the 4-mm pen and 6-mm syringe needles) are safe, effective, and less painful and should be the first-line choice in all patient categories; intramuscular injections should be avoided, especially with long-acting insulins, because severe hypoglycemia may result; lipohypertrophy is a frequent complication of therapy that distorts insulin absorption, and, therefore, injections and infusions should not be given into these lesions and correct site rotation will help prevent them; effective long-term therapy with insulin is critically dependent on addressing psychological hurdles upstream, even before insulin has been started; inappropriate disposal of used sharps poses a risk of infection with blood-borne pathogens; and mitigation is possible with proper training, effective disposal strategies, and the use of safety devices. Adherence to these new recommendations should lead to more effective therapies, improved outcomes, and lower costs for patients with diabetes.

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Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Mayo Clinic Proceedings
volume
91
issue
9
pages
25 pages
publisher
Mayo Clinic Proceedings
external identifiers
  • pmid:27594187
  • scopus:84990982216
ISSN
0025-6196
DOI
10.1016/j.mayocp.2016.06.010
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
1e120607-d263-4e34-83bb-91b333def9a4
date added to LUP
2019-02-01 15:08:31
date last changed
2024-04-15 23:28:25
@article{1e120607-d263-4e34-83bb-91b333def9a4,
  abstract     = {{<p>Many primary care professionals manage injection or infusion therapies in patients with diabetes. Few published guidelines have been available to help such professionals and their patients manage these therapies. Herein, we present new, practical, and comprehensive recommendations for diabetes injections and infusions. These recommendations were informed by a large international survey of current practice and were written and vetted by 183 diabetes experts from 54 countries at the Forum for Injection Technique and Therapy: Expert Recommendations (FITTER) workshop held in Rome, Italy, in 2015. Recommendations are organized around the themes of anatomy, physiology, pathology, psychology, and technology. Key among the recommendations are that the shortest needles (currently the 4-mm pen and 6-mm syringe needles) are safe, effective, and less painful and should be the first-line choice in all patient categories; intramuscular injections should be avoided, especially with long-acting insulins, because severe hypoglycemia may result; lipohypertrophy is a frequent complication of therapy that distorts insulin absorption, and, therefore, injections and infusions should not be given into these lesions and correct site rotation will help prevent them; effective long-term therapy with insulin is critically dependent on addressing psychological hurdles upstream, even before insulin has been started; inappropriate disposal of used sharps poses a risk of infection with blood-borne pathogens; and mitigation is possible with proper training, effective disposal strategies, and the use of safety devices. Adherence to these new recommendations should lead to more effective therapies, improved outcomes, and lower costs for patients with diabetes.</p>}},
  author       = {{Frid, Anders H. and Kreugel, Gillian and Grassi, Giorgio and Halimi, Serge and Hicks, Debbie and Hirsch, Laurence J. and Smith, Mike J. and Wellhoener, Regine and Bode, Bruce W. and Hirsch, Irl B. and Kalra, Sanjay and Ji, Linong and Strauss, Kenneth W.}},
  issn         = {{0025-6196}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{09}},
  number       = {{9}},
  pages        = {{1231--1255}},
  publisher    = {{Mayo Clinic Proceedings}},
  series       = {{Mayo Clinic Proceedings}},
  title        = {{New Insulin Delivery Recommendations}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mayocp.2016.06.010}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.mayocp.2016.06.010}},
  volume       = {{91}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}