It has been suggested that much effort expended in teaching diabetic diets is ineffective and wasteful. We have tested a different system by randomly allocating 75 newly diagnosed obese Type 2 diabetic patients to usual 'unstructured' clinic care or to group education by diabetes specialist nurses and a dietitian. Patients allocated to group education attended five 90-min group sessions during the first 6 months. Six months after diagnosis they had lost more weight (median (95% Cl), 7 (5.5-9) vs 2(1-5)kg, p less than 0.002) and were better controlled (HbA1:7.5 (7.0-8.1) vs 9.5 (8.7-10.4)%, p less than 0.001) than those randomized to the usual clinic system. At 1 year (after no further visits) the difference in weight loss was less (5.5 (4-6.5) vs 3 (2-4) kg, p less than 0.05) and diabetic control was similar (HbA1:9.0(8.2-9.8) vs 9.9(8.9-10.9)%. At 1 year only 14(39%) of the education group and 9(23%) of those attending the clinic had a fasting blood glucose less than 7.0 mmol l-1.
12 Schlesinger ER. A controlled study of health education in accident prevention. Am J Dis Child 1966;3 :490-6. 13 Robertson LS, Kelley AB, O'Neill B, et al. A controlled study of the effect of television messages on safety belt use. Am J Public Health 1974;64: 1071-80. 14 Policy Services Unit. Five percent household survey. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle County Council, 1979. 15 Turner S. Riverside child health project. First evaluation report. Newcastle: University of Newcastle, 1982. 16 Downham MAPS, White EMc, Moss TR. A study of childhood morbidity and mortality in relation to the provision of child health services in
Summary and conclusionsAdmission to hospital is usually recommended to achieve the best possible diabetic control during pregnancy. We have used blood glucose monitoring at home to find out if patients can achieve equally good control outside hospital. Twenty-five consecutive diabetic patients were studied, of whom 20 had taken insulin before pregnancy. Six of their 14 previous pregnancies had ended in perinatal death. The 25 women performed 4247 blood glucose measurements during their pregnancies. Overall the mean blood glucose concentration was 71 mmol/l (128 mg/100 ml); before meals the mean was 6 5 mmol/l (117 mg/100 ml). Mean concentrations were lower in the third trimester, but at no stage was control in hospital significantly better than at home. The mean hospital stay
Fifty-eight of a consecutive series of 75 pregnancies in women with insulin-dependent diabetes went into the third trimester. Diabetes was managed by home blood glucose monitoring and women were not routinely admitted at any stage before delivery. The mean number of in-patient days before delivery was 15 for the whole series but has been reduced to 9 during the past four years. Each woman performed an average of 171 blood glucose measurements during her pregnancy. Mean blood glucose (including post-prandial levels) fell significantly from 7.9 mmol/l in the first trimester to 7.3 in the second and 6.4 in the third. Mean percentage of haemoglobin A1 was within the normal range in the second and third trimesters. The cesarean section rate was high at 66% but there were no perinatal deaths. Three infants had congenital abnormalities. We conclude that home blood glucose monitoring is a safe and effective way of managing pregnant diabetic women as out-patients. The cost of meters and sticks is repaid many times over in the saving of hospital costs. In addition, home blood glucose monitoring is popular with the patients and many choose to continue it after delivery.
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