ORCID Profile
0000-0002-2970-2677
Current Organisation
Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital
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Publisher: Wiley
Date: 26-06-2022
DOI: 10.1111/IMJ.15433
Abstract: Diabetes is common in hospitalised patients and despite this inpatient diabetes care in Queensland has not had large scale benchmarking or audit. To establish the prevalence of diabetes in Queensland hospitals and assess the availability of specialised diabetes staff, educational resources and policies for inpatient diabetes management, including assessing equity of access to these resources. The hospital capacity, prevalence of diabetes, diabetes‐related resources and the availability of diabetes‐related guidelines were assessed in 25 hospitals medical, surgical, mental health, high‐dependency and intensive care wards across Queensland. Dedicated diabetes staffing measured in full‐time equivalents (FTE), care delivery resources, access to educational resources, standard policies and procedures for care were assessed. Twenty‐five hospitals included 4265 occupied beds. The median prevalence of diabetes was 22.9% (interquartile range (IQR) 17.3–28.5%) with an average 2.9 FTE per 100 patients with diabetes (IQR 0–6.3). There was difficulty in accessing a diabetes educator in 48% ( n = 12), diabetes specialist in 44% ( n = 11), orthopaedic surgeon in 48% ( n = 12), podiatrist in 58% ( n = 14) and vascular surgeon in 64% ( n = 16) of hospitals. Small hospitals had more difficulty accessing all members of the diabetes team compared with large hospitals including credentialled diabetes educators 33% ( n = 4) versus 62% ( n = 8) ( P 0.01), diabetes specialists 17% ( n = 2) versus 69% ( n = 9) ( P 0.01) and vascular surgeons 33% ( n = 4) versus 92% ( n = 12) ( P 0.01). Diabetes‐related staff education and regular nurse training was available in 40% ( n = 10) of hospitals. A multi‐disciplinary foot care team was available in 28% ( n = 7) of hospitals. Queensland has a high prevalence of diabetes in hospitalised patients and they have limited and inequitable access to inpatient diabetes‐related care.
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 20-04-2021
DOI: 10.1177/1753495X211006012
Abstract: Paragangliomas are rare neuroendocrine neoplasms which are often catecholamine-secreting and associated with familial syndromes. Described here are three women with a variety of pathology: isolated secretory paraganglioma diagnosed in pregnancy, secretory metastatic paraganglioma in pregnancy and non-secretory metastatic paraganglioma in pregnancy. Whilst paragangliomas are associated with morbidity and mortality during pregnancy, good maternal and fetal outcomes can be achieved through in idualised care within the context of a multidisciplinary team. Although paragangliomas are associated with morbidity and mortality in pregnancy, good maternal and fetal outcomes can be achieved through in idualised care within the context of a multidisciplinary team.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 03-05-2021
DOI: 10.5694/MJA2.51048
Abstract: To assess the quality of care for patients with diabetes in Queensland hospitals, including blood glucose control, rates of hospital-acquired harm, the incidence of insulin prescription and management errors, and appropriate foot and peri-operative care. Cross-sectional audit of 27 public hospitals in Queensland: four of five tertiary/quaternary referral centres, four of seven large regional or outer metropolitan hospitals, seven of 13 smaller outer metropolitan or small regional hospitals, and 12 of 88 hospitals in rural or remote locations. 850 adult inpatients with diabetes mellitus in medical, surgical, mental health, high dependency, or intensive care wards. Twenty-seven of 115 public hospitals that admit acute inpatients participated in the audit, including 4175 of 6652 eligible acute hospital beds in Queensland. A total of 1003 patients had diabetes (24%), and data were collected for 850 (85%). Their mean age was 65.9 years (SD, 15.1 years), 357 were women (42%), and their mean HbA We identified several deficits in inpatient diabetes management in Queensland, including high rates of medication error and hospital-acquired harm and low rates of appropriate glycaemic control, particularly for patients treated with insulin. These deficits require attention, and ongoing evaluation of outcomes is necessary.
No related grants have been discovered for Jade Eccles-Smith.