Symptoms
Clinicians should be aware of the symptoms of diabetes in children and test if there is any concern.
Symptoms of diabetes in children | Diabetes UK
Test Immediately
Advice for clinicians is to perform a capillary (finger prick) blood glucose level immediately and if >11 to refer to Bristol Childrens Hospital Emergency department the same day (Telephone 0117 342 8666).
See the BRCH advice on Referral of children with suspected Diabetes
Diabetic Ketoacidosis
Call 999 if Emergency symptoms (suggestive of DKA) : Dehydration, vomiting, acetone breath, abdominal pain, hyperventilation, confusion, shock.
All children with a suspected new diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2) should be referred as described in the Red Flags section above.
Children or Young people with established diabetes should already be under the care of paediatric diabetes services. Children who are new to area or lost to follow up should be referred as below or see the Remedy Service Guide:
BRHC
Refer via eRS (Urgent) to Paediatric Endocrinology (children aged under 16).
Advice is available from the duty Paediatric Diabetes Specialist Nurses (PDSNs) on either 0117 3428572 or 0117 342 8559.
Out of Hours and weekend advice: Phone 0117 923 0000 and ask for the on-call paediatric registrar.
Weston
Refer via eRS to General Paediatrics (children aged under 16)
RUH Bath
Refer via eRS to General Paediatrics (children aged under 17)
Young Adults
Children should automatically transition to adult services when appropriate.
There are also Young Adult Clinics at NBT (aged 16-23) and RUH (aged 16-21) - available via eRS referral. See Service Guide for details.
(1) Overview | Diabetes (type 1 and type 2) in children and young people: diagnosis and management
Efforts are made to ensure the accuracy and agreement of these guidelines, including any content uploaded, referred to or linked to from the system. However, BNSSG ICB cannot guarantee this. This guidance does not override the individual responsibility of healthcare professionals to make decisions appropriate to the circumstances of the individual patient, in consultation with the patient and/or guardian or carer, in accordance with the mental capacity act, and informed by the summary of product characteristics of any drugs they are considering. Practitioners are required to perform their duties in accordance with the law and their regulators and nothing in this guidance should be interpreted in a way that would be inconsistent with compliance with those duties.
Information provided through Remedy is continually updated so please be aware any printed copies may quickly become out of date.
Efforts are made to ensure the accuracy and agreement of these guidelines, including any content uploaded, referred to or linked to from the system. However, BNSSG ICB cannot guarantee this. This guidance does not override the individual responsibility of healthcare professionals to make decisions appropriate to the circumstances of the individual patient, in consultation with the patient and/or guardian or carer, in accordance with the mental capacity act, and informed by the summary of product characteristics of any drugs they are considering. Practitioners are required to perform their duties in accordance with the law and their regulators and nothing in this guidance should be interpreted in a way that would be inconsistent with compliance with those duties.
Information provided through Remedy is continually updated so please be aware any printed copies may quickly become out of date.