People with diabetes receiving inpatient rehabilitation have multiple unique care needs. Although the condition, event, or disability resulting in admission to an inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF) may not have a causal relationship with chronic conditions such as diabetes, the condition precipitating referral to IRF care may increase a person’s risk for worsening cardiometabolic disease. Furthermore, diabetes management in the IRF setting may be complicated by stress hyperglycemia from illness and/or drug-induced hyperglycemia from the use of glucocorticoids or other offending medications. The availability of a multidisciplinary team of clinicians and therapists in the IRF setting holds great opportunity for development of robust diabetes care and education programs to optimize therapy, teach or reinforce diabetes self-management survival skills, and facilitate safe transitions of care to individuals’ next setting of care.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Summer 2024
From Research to Practice|
August 15 2024
Multidisciplinary Diabetes Management and Education Strategies in the Inpatient Rehabilitation Setting
Christopher L. Greer;
Christopher L. Greer
1St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Medical Center, Spokane, WA
Search for other works by this author on:
Joshua J. Neumiller
2College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Washington State University, Spokane, WA
Corresponding author: Joshua J. Neumiller, [email protected]
Search for other works by this author on:
Corresponding author: Joshua J. Neumiller, [email protected]
Citation
Christopher L. Greer, Joshua J. Neumiller; Multidisciplinary Diabetes Management and Education Strategies in the Inpatient Rehabilitation Setting. Diabetes Spectr 15 August 2024; 37 (3): 227–233. https://doi.org/10.2337/dsi24-0012
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Pay-Per-View Access
$30.00
77
Views