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Quick tip for families in intensive care: Are high blood sugars normal for intensive care patients?
Quick tip for families in intensive care: Are high blood sugars normal for intensive care patients?
Here are the phone options
One day 1:1 consulting and advocacy FACE TO FACE or via zoom $20,000 per day
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/one-day-11-consulting-in-person-face/
Book your free 15-minute phone consultation here
http://intensivecarehotline.com/scheduling-appointment/
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+1 415-915-0090 USA/Canada
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Become a member for families of critically ill Patients in Intensive Care
https://intensivecarehotline.com/intensivecaresupport-org-membership/
Immediate action steps http://intensivecarehotline.com/take-control-take-charge/immediate-action-steps/
https://intensivecareathome.com
And if you need a medical record review, click on the link and we can help you with reviewing your loved one’s medical records while they’re in ICU.
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/review-of-medical-records/
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30 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $3,299
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/thirty-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
14 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $1,999
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/fourteen-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
7 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $1,299
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/seven-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
4 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $999
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/four-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
2 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $499
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/two-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
You don’t have to use the 2, 4, 7, or 14 days in a row and you can use the days at your own pace.
Here's the hour option
Book 60 minutes 1:1 phone consulting and advocacy for $249 (can be credited towards any of the options above)- click on the link
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/one-hour-11-phone-consulting-us/
Or you can join the membership here where you have access to me in the membership area for only $97/month where I advise daily and where you also have access to more material including all of our eBooks! Furthermore, you’ll get a 20% discount for 1:1 phone consulting and advocacy if you are a member!
https://intensivecarehotline.com/intensivecaresupport-org-membership/
Here is also a link to case studies
https://intensivecarehotline.com/category/questions/
https://intensivecareathome.com/category/case-studies/
Hi, it’s Patrik Hutzel from intensivecarehotline.com with another quick tip for families in intensive care.
Question from a client who says my brother has been in intensive care for 47 days now, and his blood sugar has been very high for the last few weeks, even though he’s not diabetic. Is that because they’re giving him a glucose infusion? What a great question. And let me elaborate on this.
If your brother is not diabetic, but he has high blood sugars and he’s getting a glucose or a dextrose infusion, that doesn’t mean he’s diabetic at all. It just means the body is going through a stress response. So there’s enough research out there when patients are in intensive care, whether they are diabetic or not, they end up with high blood sugars. And many patients in ICU end up with an insulin infusion at least temporarily.
Can you imagine being in ICU, critically ill, your body is going through massive stress. And because of that massive stress, the body produces more sugar and that needs to be managed with insulin. So it’s a normal response. Most patients go back to normal without high sugars, even at the end of their intensive care stay. So you shouldn’t be too concerned about it. It definitely needs to be monitor for sure. And that’s what the intensive care team is doing anyway. They’re managing it with insulin.
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