Continuous Glucose Monitoring in Resource-Constrained Settings for Hypoglycaemia Detection: Looking at the Problem from the Other Side of the Coin

The appearance, over a decade ago, of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices has triggered a patient-centred revolution in the control and management of diabetes mellitus and other metabolic conditions, improving the patient's glycaemic control and quality of life. Such devices, the use of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biosensors (Basel) Vol. 8; no. 2; pp. 43 - 48
Main Authors: Bila, Rubao, Varo, Rosauro, Madrid, Lola, Sitoe, Antonio, Bassat, Quique
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland MDPI 25-04-2018
MDPI AG
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Summary:The appearance, over a decade ago, of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices has triggered a patient-centred revolution in the control and management of diabetes mellitus and other metabolic conditions, improving the patient's glycaemic control and quality of life. Such devices, the use of which remains typically restricted to high-income countries on account of their elevated costs, at present show very limited implantation in resource-constrained settings, where many other urgent health priorities beyond diabetes prevention and management still need to be resolved. In this commentary, we argue that such devices could have an additional utility in low-income settings, whereby they could be selectively used among severely ill children admitted to hospital for closer monitoring of paediatric hypoglycaemia, a life-threatening condition often complicating severe cases of malaria, malnutrition, and other common paediatric conditions.
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ISSN:2079-6374
2079-6374
DOI:10.3390/bios8020043