• Medicina intensiva · Jan 2010

    Review

    [Telemedicine: Improving the quality of care for critical patients from the pre-hospital phase to the intensive care unit].

    • G Murias, B Sales, O García-Esquirol, and L Blanch.
    • Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos, Clínica Bazterrica y Clínica Santa Isabel, La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
    • Med Intensiva. 2010 Jan 1;34(1):46-55.

    AbstractThe Health System is in crisis and critical care (from transport systems to the ICU) cannot escape from that. Lack of integration between ambulances and reference Hospitals, a deep shortage of critical care specialists and assigned economical resources that increase less than critical care demand are the cornerstones of the problem. Moreover, the analysis of the situation anticipated that the problem will be worse in the future. "Closed" ICUs in which critical care specialists direct patient care outperform "open" ones in which primary admitting physicians direct patient care in consultation with critical care specialists. However, the current paradigm in which a critical care specialist is close to the patient is in the edge of the trouble so, only a new paradigm could help to increase the number of patients under intensivist care. Current information technology and networking capabilities should be fully exploited to improve both the extent and quality of intensivist coverage. Far to be a replacement of the existing model Telemedicine might be a complimentary tool. In fact, to centralize medical data into servers has many additional advantages that could even improve the way in which critical care physicians take care of their patients under the traditional system.Copyright 2009 Elsevier España, S.L. y SEMICYUC. All rights reserved.

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