Pomegranate Health
Pomegranate Health is a podcast about the culture of medicine. You'll hear clinicians, researchers and advocates discuss all aspects of professionalism and quality improvement in healthcare. This includes clinical ethics, diagnostic bias, better communication and more equitable systems. For a sampler of these diverse themes of professional practice take a listen to Episode 132 and Episode 125.
If RACP is your CPD home, you can log time spent listening to each episode with the "Add activity to MyCPD" button. And if you're a Basic Physician Trainee, the [Case Report] series might help you prepare for your long case clinical exams.
This is also the home of [IMJ On-Air], featuring authors from the Internal Medicine Journal sharing their latest research. Meanwhile, the [Journal Club] episodes give RACP members a place to talk through their research published in other academic journals.
Feel free to send feedback and suggestions by email at podcast@racp.edu.au.
Pomegranate Health
[IMJ On-Air] DKA and insulin infusion protocols
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Diabetic ketoacidosis can be life-threatening but there’s some variability in the way it’s managed between health settings. Intervention involves intravenous insulin administration, hydration, electrolyte replacement and treatment of the underlying precipitant. In a survey of practitioners from 31 different hospitals in Australia there was an even split between those organisations which followed a fixed rate insulin infusion protocol, usually based on bodyweight, or a variable rate infusion protocol, titrated against blood glucose concentration.
Three quarters of survey respondents had worked at another hospital that had different DKA management protocols raising concerns about the cognitive load on junior health staff moving between institutions. In Europe there has been some normalisation towards fixed rate protocols, despite there being no good quality evidence for superiority. In this podcast we hear some theories from two of the authors of the study published recently in the Internal Medicine Journal.
12:40 SGLT2 inhbitor-associated ketoacidosis
17:26 The cognitive burden of variation across settings
25:11 the challenges of researching this questions
Guests
Dr Lisa Raven FRACP PhD (St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney)
Dr Mahesh Umapathysivam FRACP DPhil (Southern Adelaide Diabetes and Endocrine Service; Royal Adelaide Hospital)
Guest Host
Dr Mervyn Kyi FRACP PhD (Royal Melbourne Hospital; Northern Hospital)
Production
Produced by Dr Mervyn Kyi and Mic Cavazzini DPhil. Music licenced from Epidemic Sound ‘Tree Tops’ by Autohacker and ‘Fugent’ by Lupus Nocte. Image created and copyrighted by RACP.
Editorial feedback kindly provided by RACP physicians Aidan Tan, Hugh Murray, Stephen Bacchi and Aafreen Khalid.
Key Reference
“Heterogeneity in the management of diabetic ketoacidosis in Australia: a national survey” [IMJ. 2025]
Please visit the Pomegranate Health web page for a transcript and supporting references.Login to MyCPD to record listening and reading as a prefilled learning activity. Subscribe to new episode email alerts or search for ‘Pomegranate Health’ in Apple Podcasts, Spotify,Castbox or any podcasting app.