Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Nurses should no longer give diabetics Lucozade to curb their dangerously low blood sugar, new guidelines state.
The fizzy drink has long been considered an effective emergency option to treat hypoglycaemia, the medical term for low blood sugar.
If left untreated, patients can slip into a diabetic coma or die.
But Lucozade’s formula was changed last April and its sugar content was halved in response to the Government’s crackdown on obesity.
And now updated guidelines, published by the Joint British Diabetes Societies for Inpatient Care, have declared that the drink shouldn’t be relied on for patients who slip into the life-threatening state in hospital.
http://www.infosurhoy.com/cocoon/sa...ses-should-no-longer-give-diabetics-lucozade/
The fizzy drink has long been considered an effective emergency option to treat hypoglycaemia, the medical term for low blood sugar.
If left untreated, patients can slip into a diabetic coma or die.
But Lucozade’s formula was changed last April and its sugar content was halved in response to the Government’s crackdown on obesity.
And now updated guidelines, published by the Joint British Diabetes Societies for Inpatient Care, have declared that the drink shouldn’t be relied on for patients who slip into the life-threatening state in hospital.
http://www.infosurhoy.com/cocoon/sa...ses-should-no-longer-give-diabetics-lucozade/