Abstract

People living with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) have relative insulin deficiency and, therefore, have options to insulin therapy. To be on insulin alone or in combination with other therapies in type 2 DM outpatients is a choice made personalized for each patient. Published literature on the insulin initiation patterns among T2DM outpatients in Nigeria is scanty. The objective of this study, therefore, is to bridge this gap in knowledge. This was a prospective cross sectional study conducted in five tertiary health facilities in Nigeria in which consenting type 2 DM outpatients on insulin therapy alone or in combination with other therapies and who meet the inclusion criteria for the study were recruited. Relevant data relating to insulin use initiation by the patients were analyzed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 23.0 software. A total of 268 outpatients living with type 2 DM on insulin therapy, made up of 116 (43.3%) male and 152 (56.7%) females participated in the study. Only 55 (20.5%) of the patients started insulin at onset of diagnosis of T2DM while 46 (17.2%) of the patients started insulin therapy after 5 years of living with T2DM. The duration of living with DM before insulin initiation and the patient's highest level of education were not statistically significant. Insulin initiation was delayed several months to years after diagnosis of T2DM by predominantly endocrinologists in tertiary health facilities but it was initiated in 19 (7.1%) of the T2DM outpatients by primary care physicians (GPs) in peripheral hospitals. It is recommended that diabetes education be intensified for T2DM patients to appreciate the key role of insulin therapy in diabetes care.
 Keywords: insulin initiation, type 2 diabetes mellitus outpatients, Nigeria.

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