PRINCIPLES
- Use this guideline in the last hours or days of life when oral intake reduced
- If not already explored, discuss changing approach to diabetes management with patient and/or family
- For further advice contact diabetes specialist nurses or palliative care team
- If patient remains on insulin, involve diabetes specialist nurses and agree monitoring strategy
- make referral to diabetes specialist nurses via OrderComms
Symptoms and tests
- Keep tests to a minimum
- It may be necessary to perform some tests to ensure unpleasant symptoms do not occur due to low or high blood glucose
- It can be difficult to tell the difference between features of the dying process and symptoms of hypo or hyperglycaemia
- If patient symptomatic, test blood glucose
- Observe for symptoms in previously insulin treated patient where insulin has been discontinued
Type 1 diabetes
- Always on insulin
- Prescribe once daily dose of long-acting insulin e.g.
- glargine based on 25% less than total previous daily insulin dose
- Check blood glucose daily at teatime
- if <8 mmol/L, reduce insulin by 10–20%
- if >20 mmol/L, increase insulin by 10–20%
Type 2 diabetes on insulin
- If patient’s total daily insulin dose is <0.3 units/kg, stop insulin
- if not appropriate to weigh the patient, use admission weight, last known weight or an estimate
If insulin stopped
- Check capillary blood glucose daily
- If blood glucose >20 mmol/L, give 6 units rapid acting insulin
- Recheck capillary blood glucose after 2 hr
- If patient requires rapid acting insulin more than twice, consider daily long acting insulin e.g glargine
If insulin to continue
- Prescribe once daily dose of long acting insulin e.g.
- glargine based on 25% less than total previous daily insulin dose
- Check blood glucose daily at teatime
- if <8 mmol/L, reduce insulin by 10–20%
- if >20 mmol/L, increase insulin by 10–20%
Type 2 diabetes not on insulin
- Stop treatment and stop blood glucose monitoring
Last reviewed: 2025-07-18