Abstract

Introduction Proper insulin injection practice is essential for better diabetic control. This study aims to assess the insulin injection practice of patients with diabetes. Materials and Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted at Chitwan Medical College Teaching Hospital, Bharatpur, Nepal, from February 2017 to May 2017. Patients injecting insulin through insulin pens (n = 43) for a minimum of 4 weeks were consecutively recruited. Patients' baseline characteristics, current insulin injection technique, insulin transportation practice, complications of insulin injection, disposal practice of used needle, and acceptability of insulin were recorded. Descriptive statistics were performed using IBM-SPSS 20.0. Results The insulin injection technique of patients and their relatives was inadequate. The majority of patients and their relatives (25, 58.1%) mentioned that they transport their insulin cartridge without maintaining cold chain. Thirteen patients (30.2%, n = 43) reported complications of insulin injection and the most common complication among those patients was bruising (10, 76.9%, n = 13). Almost all patients disposed the used needle improperly, and the common method was disposing the needle in a dustbin and then transferring to municipal waste disposal vehicle. Insulin was accepted by just 16 (37.2%) patients. Conclusion There was a significant gap between the insulin delivery recommendation through insulin pen and current insulin injection practice.

Highlights

  • Proper insulin injection practice is essential for better diabetic control

  • Insulin is the indispensable component of the management of Diabetes mellitus (DM) [4], and the proportions of patients using insulin vary from country to country [5, 6]

  • More than four-fifths of the participants used a single type of insulin for the management of DM

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Summary

Introduction

Proper insulin injection practice is essential for better diabetic control. This study aims to assess the insulin injection practice of patients with diabetes. Patients injecting insulin through insulin pens (n = 43) for a minimum of 4 weeks were consecutively recruited. The insulin injection technique of patients and their relatives was inadequate. Reliable statistics on proportion of diabetes patients using insulin are lacking from Nepal. Correct insulin injection technique is essential for better diabetic control [7]. One of the large multinational surveys (n = 13,289) in 42 countries showed that the patients’ insulin injection technique was inappropriate [8]. Studies in our neighboring countries, India and China, showed a significant gap between the insulin administration guidelines and insulin injection technique [9,10,11].

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