Critical care clinics
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Health care systems stem from specific political, historical, cultural,and socioeconomic traditions. As a result, the organizational arrangements for health care differ considerably between Member States of the European Union. Health care in the European Union is at a crossroads between challenges and opportunities. The Member States are facing common challenges in delivering equal, efficient, and high-quality health services at affordable cost in times when the amount of care to be delivered is starting to exceed the resource base.
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Critical care clinics · Jul 2006
ReviewNew cardiopulmonary resuscitation guidelines 2005: importance of uninterrupted chest compression.
The evidence supports quality controlled chest compression as the initial intervention after "sudden death" before attempted defibrillation, if the duration of cardiac arrest is more than 5 minutes. The new guidelines mandate lesser interruptions for ventilation, before and following electrical shocks, and single rather than multiple electrical shocks before resuming chest compression. The new guidelines refocus on uninterrupted chest compression after cardiac arrest of nonasphyxial cause and modifications in practices that reduce the need for interruptions.
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Critical care clinics · Jul 2006
ReviewManagement of severe sepsis and septic shock: challenges and recommendations.
Sepsis and related aspects has become an area of active and intense research, leading to important advances for an early diagnosis and appropriate management useful to improve patient outcome. The septic response is an extremely complex cascade of events, including proinflammatory, anti-inflammatory, humoral, cellular, and circulatory involvement. The pathophysiology of this syndrome, its various and changing clinical aspects, and the vast variety of therapeutic options available, not always of well-proved efficacy, make its management a goal difficult to achieve.
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There are numerous factors that continue to influence the practice of critical care medicine. This article focuses on issues that have significantly impacted critical care practice during the last decade, such as changing socioeconomic factors, the increasing influence of specialty groups and governmental agencies, and the translation of evidence-based medicine into practice.
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Despite decades of studies and experiences, an evidence-based medicine consensus on the more appropriate treatment of trauma patients in the out-of-hospital setting has not yet been achieved. Different approaches exist and no one has been demonstrated clearly superior over the others for all circumstances and for all patients. A number of factors likely account for this finding.