π©Έ Nursing Care Plan on Diabetes Mellitus
Medical-Surgical Nursing | NANDA Nursing Care Plan Format
Endocrine Nursing | Practical File Ready
π Student Information
| Student Name | [Your Name] |
| Course | BSc Nursing / GNM / ANM |
| Subject | Medical-Surgical Nursing / Endocrine Nursing |
| Topic | Nursing Care Plan on Diabetes Mellitus |
| Format | NANDA-I Nursing Care Plan Format |
| Date of Submission | [Enter Date] |
| Clinical Instructor | [Instructor Name] |
π Page 1 β Patient Identification Data
| Name | Mr. Ramesh Kumar Sharma |
| Age | 55 Years |
| Sex | Male |
| Address | Mansarovar, Jaipur, Rajasthan |
| Occupation | Shopkeeper |
| Marital Status | Married |
| Religion/Category | Hindu / General |
| Annual Income | βΉ4,80,000/- approximately |
| Diagnosis | Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus with Hyperglycemia |
| Type of Family | Nuclear Family |
| Family Size | 5 Members |
| Ward Name | Medical Ward |
| Bed Number | 12 |
| Doctor Incharge | Dr. A. K. Meena, MD Medicine |
| Date of Admission | 12/03/2026 |
| Hospital Name | Sawai Man Singh Hospital, Jaipur |
π Page 2 β Chief Complaints & Clinical History
CHIEF COMPLAINTS
The patient was admitted to the medical ward with the following complaints:
- Excessive thirst since 2 weeks
- Frequent urination, especially during night, since 2 weeks
- Generalized weakness and fatigue since 10 days
- Increased hunger since 1 month
- Occasional blurred vision since 1 week
- Delayed healing of small wound over right foot since 8 days
- Dryness of mouth and skin
- Unintentional weight loss of approximately 3 kg in last 2 months
HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS
Mr. Ramesh Kumar Sharma, a 55-year-old male shopkeeper, was apparently well until about 2 weeks before admission when he started experiencing excessive thirst and frequent urination. He reported passing urine 10β12 times per day and 3β4 times at night, which disturbed his sleep. He also complained of dryness of mouth, increased hunger, generalized weakness, and easy fatigability while doing routine work at his shop.
The patient noticed that a small wound over the right foot, caused by minor trauma while walking, was healing slowly. He also experienced occasional blurred vision and mild headache. He ignored the symptoms initially and increased his water intake. As weakness and frequency of urination increased, he visited the outpatient department where random blood sugar was found to be 320 mg/dL. He was advised admission for blood glucose monitoring, diabetic evaluation, wound care, medication adjustment, and patient education.
On admission, the patient was conscious and oriented but appeared weak and anxious about his condition. His vital signs were stable except mildly elevated blood pressure. Blood investigations revealed fasting blood sugar 180 mg/dL, post-prandial blood sugar 286 mg/dL, HbA1c 8.5%, and urine sugar positive. The patient was diagnosed as Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus with Hyperglycemia and was started on diabetic diet, oral antidiabetic medication, blood glucose monitoring, wound care, and health education.
PAST MEDICAL HISTORY
- Known case of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus for 5 years.
- Patient was taking oral antidiabetic medication irregularly.
- History of hypertension for 3 years; on antihypertensive medication.
- No history of tuberculosis, asthma, epilepsy, thyroid disorder, or chronic kidney disease.
- No history of previous diabetic ketoacidosis or hypoglycemic coma.
- No known drug allergy or food allergy.
PAST SURGICAL HISTORY
- No history of major surgery.
- No history of amputation or diabetic foot surgery.
- No history of blood transfusion.
- No history of previous hospitalization for any major illness.
π Page 3 β Family History & Composition
FAMILY HISTORY
- The patient belongs to a nuclear family.
- There are 5 members in the family β patient, wife, one son, one daughter-in-law, and one grandson.
- Father had history of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and hypertension.
- Mother had history of hypertension.
- Younger brother is also diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
- No family history of tuberculosis, bronchial asthma, epilepsy, or psychiatric illness.
- There is a positive family history of diabetes mellitus.
FAMILY COMPOSITION
| Name | Age/Sex | Education | Occupation | Marital Status | Relationship | Health Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mr. Ramesh Kumar Sharma | 55/M | B.A. | Shopkeeper | Married | Self / Patient | Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus with Hyperglycemia |
| Mrs. Sunita Sharma | 50/F | Secondary | Housewife | Married | Wife | Healthy |
| Mr. Amit Sharma | 28/M | B.Com | Private Job | Married | Son | Healthy |
| Mrs. Pooja Sharma | 25/F | B.A. | Housewife | Married | Daughter-in-law | Healthy |
| Master Aarav Sharma | 3/M | - | - | Unmarried | Grandson | Healthy |
FAMILY TREE
π Page 4 β Dietary, Personal, Socio-Economic & Environmental History
DIETARY HISTORY
- The patient takes a mixed diet but mostly vegetarian food at home.
- He consumes 4β5 cups of tea daily with sugar.
- He has a habit of eating sweets, biscuits, namkeen, and fried snacks frequently.
- He usually takes heavy dinner late at night due to shop timing.
- Intake of green leafy vegetables, salads, fruits, and high-fiber food is inadequate.
- He does not follow a regular diabetic diet plan.
- He often skips breakfast and takes irregular meals.
- Fluid intake is adequate, but thirst has increased due to hyperglycemia.
- No known food allergy reported.
PERSONAL HISTORY
- Sleep: Disturbed due to frequent urination at night.
- Appetite: Increased appetite for last 1 month.
- Bowel: Regular, once daily.
- Bladder: Increased frequency of urination, especially at night.
- Habits: Occasional tobacco chewing for 10 years; no alcohol intake reported.
- Activity level: Sedentary lifestyle; spends most of the day sitting at shop.
- Exercise: No regular walking or exercise routine.
- Hygiene: Maintains average personal hygiene but has inadequate foot care practices.
- Allergy: No known drug or food allergy.
- BMI: 28.4 kg/mΒ² β Overweight.
SOCIO-ECONOMIC HISTORY
- The patient belongs to a middle-class family.
- Main source of income is his grocery shop and son's private job.
- Family income is sufficient for basic needs and treatment expenses.
- Patient has access to nearby hospital and medical facilities.
- Family members are supportive and willing to help in diet control and medication adherence.
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
- The patient lives in a pucca house with adequate ventilation and lighting.
- Safe drinking water supply is available.
- Sanitation facilities are adequate.
- House surroundings are clean.
- No exposure to industrial pollution or harmful chemicals.
- Cooking is done using LPG gas.
π Page 5 & 6 β Physical Examination
GENERAL CONDITION
Patient is conscious, oriented to time, place, and person. He appears weak and mildly anxious. Patient is cooperative during examination. No acute respiratory distress is present. Mild dehydration signs are observed due to hyperglycemia and polyuria.
VITAL SIGNS
- Temperature: 98.4Β°F
- Pulse: 88 beats/min, regular
- Respiration: 20 breaths/min
- Blood Pressure: 146/90 mmHg
- SpOβ: 98% on room air
- Random Blood Sugar: 320 mg/dL on admission
- Pain Score: 2/10 due to mild right foot wound discomfort
GENERAL APPEARANCE
- Built: Moderately built and overweight.
- Posture: Normal sitting and standing posture.
- Gait: Slightly cautious due to right foot wound.
- Speech: Clear and coherent.
- Skin: Dry skin with mild dehydration signs.
- Facial expression: Mildly anxious regarding blood sugar control.
SYSTEMIC EXAMINATION
| Cardiovascular | S1 and S2 heard clearly. No murmur. Pulse 88/min regular. Peripheral pulses palpable. Blood pressure mildly elevated. No pedal edema. |
| Respiratory | Chest symmetrical. Respiratory rate 20/min. Vesicular breath sounds heard bilaterally. No wheeze, crackles, or respiratory distress. |
| Neurological | Patient conscious and oriented. GCS 15/15. Pupils equal and reacting to light. No focal neurological deficit. Mild tingling sensation occasionally present in both feet. |
| Skin | Skin dry and warm. Mild dehydration present. Small superficial wound over right foot with delayed healing. No cyanosis, clubbing, or icterus. |
| Head & Face | Head normal in shape. Face symmetrical. No facial puffiness. Mild tired look present. |
| Eyes | Conjunctiva pink. Sclera white. Pupils equal and reactive. Patient complains of occasional blurred vision. No redness or discharge. |
| Ear | External ear normal. No discharge. Hearing response normal. |
| Nose | Nose normal. No nasal discharge. Nostrils patent. |
| Mouth & Pharynx | Oral mucosa slightly dry. Tongue moist but coated. No throat congestion. Dental hygiene average. |
| Neck | Neck movement normal. No lymph node enlargement. Thyroid not enlarged. No JVD. |
| Abdomen | Abdomen soft and non-tender. No distension. Bowel sounds present. No organomegaly detected. |
| Extremities | No pedal edema. Peripheral pulses palpable. Small superficial wound present on right foot. Mild numbness and tingling sensation in feet. Capillary refill less than 3 seconds. |
π Page 7 β Vital Signs Monitoring Record
| DATE/TIME | TEMP | PULSE | RESP | BP | SpOβ | RBS/FBS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 β Admission | 98.4Β°F | 88/min | 20/min | 146/90 | 98% | RBS 320 mg/dL |
| Day 2 β Morning | 98.2Β°F | 84/min | 19/min | 140/86 | 98% | FBS 210 mg/dL |
| Day 3 β Morning | 98.6Β°F | 82/min | 18/min | 136/84 | 99% | FBS 168 mg/dL |
| Day 4 β Discharge | 98.4Β°F | 78/min | 18/min | 130/80 | 99% | FBS 132 mg/dL |
π Page 8 β Diagnostic Investigations
| SR. NO. | INVESTIGATION | NORMAL VALUE | PATIENT VALUE | INTERPRETATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hemoglobin | 13β17 g/dL | 12.8 g/dL | Slightly low |
| 2 | Total WBC Count | 4,000β11,000/mmΒ³ | 9,800/mmΒ³ | Normal |
| 3 | Platelet Count | 1.5β4 lakh/mmΒ³ | 2.6 lakh/mmΒ³ | Normal |
| 4 | Fasting Blood Sugar | 70β110 mg/dL | 210 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 5 | Post-Prandial Blood Sugar | <140 mg/dL | 286 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 6 | Random Blood Sugar | <200 mg/dL | 320 mg/dL | Marked hyperglycemia |
| 7 | HbA1c | <6.5% | 9.1% | Poor long-term glycemic control |
| 8 | Urine Sugar | Absent | +++ | Glycosuria present |
| 9 | Urine Ketone | Absent | Negative | No ketoacidosis |
| 10 | Serum Creatinine | 0.7β1.3 mg/dL | 1.0 mg/dL | Normal renal function |
| 11 | Blood Urea | 15β40 mg/dL | 34 mg/dL | Normal |
| 12 | Serum Sodium | 135β145 mEq/L | 138 mEq/L | Normal |
| 13 | Serum Potassium | 3.5β5.0 mEq/L | 4.2 mEq/L | Normal |
| 14 | Total Cholesterol | <200 mg/dL | 232 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 15 | LDL Cholesterol | <100 mg/dL | 148 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 16 | HDL Cholesterol | >40 mg/dL | 36 mg/dL | Low |
| 17 | Triglycerides | <150 mg/dL | 210 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 18 | Foot Wound Swab | No pathogenic growth | Mild bacterial growth | Local wound infection risk |
π Page 9 β Medical Management (Drug Chart)
| SR. NO. | MEDICATION | DOSE | FREQUENCY | ROUTE | ACTION / PURPOSE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Inj. Regular Insulin | As per sliding scale | Before meals and bedtime | Subcutaneous | Rapid control of high blood glucose level. |
| 2 | Tab. Metformin | 500 mg | BD after meals | Oral | Biguanide; decreases hepatic glucose production and improves insulin sensitivity. |
| 3 | Tab. Glimepiride | 2 mg | OD before breakfast | Oral | Sulfonylurea; stimulates pancreatic insulin secretion. |
| 4 | Tab. Telmisartan | 40 mg | OD | Oral | Antihypertensive; controls blood pressure and protects kidney function in diabetes. |
| 5 | Tab. Atorvastatin | 20 mg | HS | Oral | Statin; lowers LDL cholesterol and reduces cardiovascular risk. |
| 6 | Tab. Pantoprazole | 40 mg | OD before breakfast | Oral | Proton pump inhibitor; prevents gastric irritation due to medicines. |
| 7 | Tab. Multivitamin | 1 tablet | OD | Oral | Supports general health and nutritional status. |
| 8 | Tab. Vitamin B Complex | 1 tablet | OD | Oral | Helps nerve health and reduces neuropathy-related symptoms. |
| 9 | Normal Saline | 500 mL | As prescribed | IV infusion | Maintains hydration and corrects fluid deficit due to polyuria. |
| 10 | Povidone Iodine Dressing | Local application | Once daily | Topical | Antiseptic dressing for right foot wound to prevent infection. |
| 11 | Tab. Amoxicillin + Clavulanic Acid | 625 mg | BD | Oral | Antibiotic; prevents/treats local wound infection as prescribed. |
| 12 | Tab. Paracetamol | 500 mg | SOS | Oral | Analgesic and antipyretic; relieves pain or fever if present. |
π Page 10 β NANDA Nursing Diagnoses
- Risk for unstable blood glucose level related to inadequate diabetes management, irregular diet pattern, sedentary lifestyle, and insufficient knowledge regarding diabetic care as evidenced by RBS 320 mg/dL, FBS 210 mg/dL, PPBS 286 mg/dL, HbA1c 9.1%, polyuria, polydipsia, and fatigue.
- Deficient knowledge regarding diabetes mellitus, medication adherence, diabetic diet, blood glucose monitoring, foot care, and prevention of complications as evidenced by irregular medication intake, lack of regular blood sugar monitoring, and poor understanding of diabetic diet.
- Risk for infection related to hyperglycemia, delayed wound healing, and impaired immune response as evidenced by superficial right foot wound and mild bacterial growth in wound swab.
- Impaired skin integrity related to delayed wound healing secondary to diabetes mellitus as evidenced by superficial wound over right foot, dry skin, and delayed tissue repair.
- Imbalanced nutrition: more than body requirements related to excessive intake of sweets, fried foods, irregular meals, and sedentary lifestyle as evidenced by BMI 28.4 kg/mΒ², dyslipidemia, and uncontrolled blood sugar level.
- Risk for peripheral neurovascular dysfunction related to long-term uncontrolled diabetes mellitus as evidenced by occasional tingling and numbness in both feet.
- Fatigue related to altered glucose metabolism and hyperglycemia as evidenced by patient complaint of weakness, tiredness, and reduced activity tolerance.
- Ineffective health maintenance related to inadequate lifestyle modification, tobacco chewing habit, irregular follow-up, poor dietary control, and lack of regular exercise as evidenced by uncontrolled diabetes, elevated HbA1c, dyslipidemia, and overweight status.
π Page 11-13 β Nursing Care Plans (NANDA Format)
Nursing Care Plan β 1: Risk for Unstable Blood Glucose Level
| ASSESSMENT | NURSING DIAGNOSIS | GOAL / EXPECTED OUTCOME | PLANNING | IMPLEMENTATION | EVALUATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective: Patient complains of increased thirst, frequent urination, weakness, and tiredness. Patient says, βMera sugar control nahi ho raha hai.β Objective: RBS 320 mg/dL, FBS 210 mg/dL, PPBS 286 mg/dL, HbA1c 9.1%, dry mouth, polyuria, irregular medication history, irregular diet pattern. |
Risk for unstable blood glucose level related to inadequate diabetes management, irregular diet pattern, sedentary lifestyle, and insufficient knowledge regarding diabetic care as evidenced by RBS 320 mg/dL, FBS 210 mg/dL, PPBS 286 mg/dL, HbA1c 9.1%, polyuria, polydipsia, and fatigue. |
Short-term goal: Patientβs blood glucose level will gradually reduce toward acceptable range within 3β4 days. Long-term goal: Patient will maintain blood glucose level through medication adherence, diabetic diet, exercise, and regular monitoring. |
|
|
Patientβs blood glucose level improved gradually. RBS reduced from 320 mg/dL on admission to FBS 132 mg/dL by discharge. Patient verbalized understanding of medication schedule, diet control, and regular blood glucose monitoring. |
Nursing Care Plan β 2: Deficient Knowledge
| ASSESSMENT | NURSING DIAGNOSIS | GOAL / EXPECTED OUTCOME | PLANNING | IMPLEMENTATION | EVALUATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective: Patient says, βMujhe diabetic diet aur foot care ke baare mein poori jankari nahi hai.β Patient reports irregular medicine intake and no regular blood sugar monitoring. Objective: Poor knowledge about diabetes complications, irregular follow-up, unhealthy diet habits, no regular exercise, right foot wound present. |
Deficient knowledge regarding diabetes mellitus, medication adherence, diabetic diet, blood glucose monitoring, foot care, and prevention of complications as evidenced by irregular medication intake, lack of regular blood sugar monitoring, and poor understanding of diabetic diet. |
Short-term goal: Patient will verbalize basic understanding of diabetes, medication, diet, and foot care within 48 hours. Long-term goal: Patient will demonstrate correct self-care practices and follow regular treatment plan after discharge. |
|
|
Patient and family verbalized understanding of diabetes care. Patient correctly repeated medication timing, diabetic diet restrictions, foot care steps, and warning signs requiring medical attention. |
Nursing Care Plan β 3: Risk for Infection
| ASSESSMENT | NURSING DIAGNOSIS | GOAL / EXPECTED OUTCOME | PLANNING | IMPLEMENTATION | EVALUATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective: Patient complains of mild discomfort at right foot wound site. Objective: Superficial right foot wound present, delayed healing, dry skin, hyperglycemia, wound swab showing mild bacterial growth, no fever. |
Risk for infection related to hyperglycemia, delayed wound healing, and impaired immune response as evidenced by superficial right foot wound and mild bacterial growth in wound swab. |
Short-term goal: Patient will remain free from signs of systemic infection during hospitalization. Long-term goal: Wound will heal without complications, and patient will follow proper wound and foot care at home. |
|
|
Patient remained afebrile. No pus discharge or spreading redness observed. Wound condition improved, and patient verbalized correct wound care and foot care measures before discharge. |
π Page 14 β Discharge Summary
Mr. Rajesh Kumar Sharma, 54-year-old male, was admitted to the medical ward with complaints of increased thirst, frequent urination, weakness, fatigue, occasional blurred vision, and delayed healing of a small right foot wound. On admission, his random blood sugar was 320 mg/dL, fasting blood sugar was 210 mg/dL, post-prandial blood sugar was 286 mg/dL, and HbA1c was 9.1%, indicating uncontrolled Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
During hospitalization, the patient was managed with regular blood glucose monitoring, insulin therapy according to sliding scale, oral antidiabetic medications, diabetic diet, hydration, wound dressing, and health education. His blood glucose level gradually improved. By discharge, fasting blood sugar reduced to 132 mg/dL, vital signs were stable, and the right foot wound showed improvement without signs of systemic infection.
The patient and family were educated regarding diabetes mellitus, medication adherence, diabetic diet, regular exercise, blood glucose monitoring, foot care, wound care, prevention of complications, and follow-up visits. Patient is being discharged in stable condition with advice to continue medicines regularly and follow diabetic lifestyle modification.
At discharge, the patient is advised to:
- Take all antidiabetic medicines exactly as prescribed by the physician.
- Do not skip meals after taking insulin or oral antidiabetic tablets.
- Monitor blood sugar regularly and maintain a blood glucose record diary.
- Follow a diabetic diet: avoid sweets, sugary drinks, fried foods, refined flour, and excess rice or potato.
- Include whole grains, pulses, green leafy vegetables, salads, fruits in controlled quantity, and protein-rich food as advised.
- Drink adequate water unless restricted by the physician.
- Walk for at least 30 minutes daily as tolerated.
- Maintain ideal body weight and avoid sedentary lifestyle.
- Stop tobacco chewing completely.
- Inspect feet daily for cuts, cracks, redness, swelling, blisters, or wounds.
- Wash feet daily with lukewarm water and dry properly, especially between toes.
- Do not walk barefoot, even inside the house.
- Wear comfortable, well-fitting footwear.
- Keep right foot wound clean and dry; continue dressing as advised.
- Report immediately if wound shows redness, swelling, pus discharge, foul smell, fever, or increasing pain.
- Recognize symptoms of hypoglycemia such as sweating, tremors, hunger, dizziness, confusion, and weakness.
- Carry sugar candy/glucose tablets for emergency hypoglycemia management.
- Attend follow-up visit after 1 week or as advised by the physician.
- Repeat HbA1c every 3 months and lipid profile as advised.
- Consult doctor immediately if blood sugar remains very high, patient develops vomiting, excessive weakness, drowsiness, chest pain, breathlessness, or altered sensorium.
π Page 15 β Health Education
Medication Compliance β
Patient was educated to take antidiabetic medicines regularly at the prescribed time. He was advised not to stop medicines when symptoms improve because diabetes is a chronic condition requiring long-term control. Patient was instructed not to skip meals after taking insulin or oral antidiabetic tablets, as this may cause hypoglycemia. He was taught to keep medicines safely, follow correct dose, and consult the doctor before changing any medicine. Family members were advised to support the patient in maintaining a regular medication schedule.
Blood Glucose Monitoring β
Patient was advised to monitor fasting and post-prandial blood sugar regularly as prescribed. He was instructed to maintain a blood glucose diary with date, time, reading, medicine taken, diet changes, and symptoms if any. HbA1c testing every 3 months was advised to assess long-term glucose control. Patient was educated that good sugar control helps prevent complications such as diabetic foot, kidney disease, eye disease, nerve damage, heart disease, and stroke.
Diabetic Diet β
Patient was advised to follow a balanced diabetic diet with controlled carbohydrate intake. He was instructed to avoid sweets, sugar, jaggery, honey, sugary tea, cold drinks, packaged juices, bakery items, fried snacks, refined flour products, and excessive rice or potato. He was advised to include whole wheat roti, oats, dal, pulses, sprouts, green leafy vegetables, salad, curd, and protein-rich foods in controlled portions. Meals should be taken at regular intervals and skipping meals should be avoided. Portion control was emphasized. Patient was advised to consult a dietician for an individualized diabetic diet chart.
Exercise and Weight Control β
Patient was advised to perform regular physical activity such as brisk walking for 30 minutes daily, at least 5 days per week, as tolerated. He was instructed to avoid prolonged sitting and include light household activity. Exercise helps improve insulin sensitivity, reduces blood glucose level, controls weight, improves lipid profile, and reduces cardiovascular risk. Patient was advised to start slowly and increase activity gradually. He should avoid exercise during severe hypoglycemia, very high blood sugar with illness, or if feeling dizzy or weak.
Foot Care β
Patient was educated that diabetic patients are at high risk of foot ulcers due to reduced sensation, poor circulation, and delayed wound healing. He was advised to inspect both feet daily for cuts, cracks, redness, swelling, blisters, wounds, or color changes. Feet should be washed daily with lukewarm water and dried properly, especially between toes. Moisturizer may be applied to dry skin but not between toes. Nails should be cut straight across. Patient should not walk barefoot and should always wear soft, comfortable footwear. Any foot injury should be reported early.
Hypoglycemia Management β
Patient was taught symptoms of low blood sugar such as sweating, tremors, hunger, dizziness, headache, palpitations, confusion, irritability, weakness, and fainting. If symptoms occur and patient is conscious, he should immediately take 15 grams of fast-acting carbohydrate such as glucose powder/tablet, sugar candy, or sweet drink, then recheck blood sugar after 15 minutes if possible. After recovery, he should take a small snack or meal. Family members were educated to seek emergency help if patient becomes unconscious or unable to swallow.
Prevention of Complications β
Patient was educated that uncontrolled diabetes can affect eyes, kidneys, nerves, heart, blood vessels, and feet. Regular eye check-up, kidney function test, urine microalbumin, lipid profile, blood pressure monitoring, and foot examination were advised. Patient was instructed to stop tobacco chewing completely because tobacco increases risk of vascular disease, delayed wound healing, heart disease, and stroke. He was advised to attend regular follow-up and never ignore wounds, infection, chest pain, breathlessness, severe weakness, vomiting, or altered sensorium.
Follow-up Care β
Patient was advised to visit the physician after 1 week or as instructed. He should bring blood sugar records, medicine list, and wound dressing details during follow-up. HbA1c should be repeated every 3 months. Lipid profile, renal function test, urine test, eye examination, and foot examination should be done as advised. Patient and family were encouraged to maintain long-term lifestyle modification for better diabetes control and prevention of complications.
π Page 16 β Bibliography
- Brunner, L.S. & Suddarth, D.S. (2022). Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing (15th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. Chapter: Management of Patients with Diabetes Mellitus and Metabolic Disorders.
- NANDA International. (2024). Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification 2024β2026 (13th ed.). Thieme Medical Publishers.
- Lewis, S.L., Bucher, L., Heitkemper, M.M., Harding, M.M., Kwong, J., & Roberts, D. (2023). Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems (12th ed.). Elsevier.
- Ignatavicius, D.D., Workman, M.L., Rebar, C.R., & Heimgartner, N.M. (2024). Medical-Surgical Nursing: Concepts for Interprofessional Collaborative Care (11th ed.). Elsevier.
- Doenges, M.E., Moorhouse, M.F., & Murr, A.C. (2024). Nursing Care Plans: Guidelines for Individualizing Client Care Across the Life Span (11th ed.). F.A. Davis Company.
- American Diabetes Association. (2025). Standards of Care in Diabetesβ2025. Diabetes Care, 48(Supplement 1).
- World Health Organization. (2025). Diabetes β Fact Sheet. WHO, Geneva.
- Indian Council of Medical Research. (2024). ICMR Guidelines for Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. ICMR, New Delhi.
βοΈ Medical Disclaimer: This nursing care plan is prepared for educational and academic purposes only as part of nursing practical file work (ANM, GNM, BSc Nursing). It is not intended for actual patient care, clinical decision-making, or medical diagnosis. Always refer to your institution's guidelines and standard nursing textbooks.
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