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Many
people with Diabetes do not know or heed
dangers of Hot Weather
Newswise, June 21, 2010 — A new survey shows
that diabetic individuals who live in a hot
climate have important gaps in their “heat
awareness,” or knowledge about proper
diabetes self-care in hot weather, even
though diabetes raises their risk of heat
illness. The results of “Diabetes in the
Desert: What Do Patients Know About the
Heat?” will be presented Monday at The
Endocrine Society’s 92nd Annual Meeting in
San Diego.
Researchers from Mayo Clinic in Arizona, in
collaboration with the National Ocean and
Atmospheric Administration and the National
Weather Service, surveyed patients at a
Phoenix diabetes clinic and analyzed 152
surveys.
Responses
showed that people living with diabetes in
hot climates need increased awareness of how
heat affects their disease, said lead
researcher Adrienne Nassar, MD, third-year
medical resident at Mayo Clinic.
“People with diabetes have an impaired
ability to sweat, which predisposes them to
heat-related illness, as do uncontrolled,
high blood sugars,” Nassar said. “Many
patients surveyed had suboptimal glycemic
control during the summer, possibly
increasing their risk of dehydration.”
Past research shows that during hot weather
people with diabetes have an increased
number of emergency room visits,
hospitalizations and deaths due to heat
illness.
Yet one in five survey respondents said they
would not take precautions until
temperatures exceeded 100 degrees
Fahrenheit. “Heat illness can take place at
80 to 90 degrees when you factor in the heat
index,” Nassar said.
Only about half of the patients knew the
definition of the heat index—the combination
of air temperature and humidity. High
humidity makes heat more dangerous because
it slows the evaporation of perspiration,
the way the body cools itself.
Heat also can harm the effectiveness of
diabetes medications and supplies. “Oral
medications as well as insulin have a
therapeutic temperature range above which
they lose efficacy,” Nassar said. The drug’s
package insert includes information about
proper temperatures for storage.
Although 73 percent of respondents had
received information about the harmful
effect of heat on insulin, fewer knew about
the adverse effects of heat on their oral
diabetes medications (39 percent) and on
glucose meters (41 percent) and glucose test
strips (38 percent).
Even when survey respondents knew that they
should protect their diabetes medications
and glucose-testing supplies from heat, an
alarming proportion—37 percent—chose to
leave them at home rather than risk heat
exposure.
“If they are unable to check their blood
sugars while they are away from home, that’s
unsafe,” Nassar said.
“Increasingly more people with diabetes are
living in places characterized by hot
weather. Patient education focusing on
diabetes management in hot climates is
needed,” she said.
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