Current opinion in critical care
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Ethical issues have emerged in recent years as a significant component of care in the critically ill patient. Recently, the primary emphasis has been directed to care at the end-of-life. ⋯ This leads to tremendous potential for conflict between the physician and the family, as the patients are often incapable of participating in any discussion regarding end-of-life care. Advance planning on the part of the patient in terms of making their wishes known and education of the health care professionals is essential in promoting effective communication, thereby avoiding conflict in these difficult end-of-life decisions.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2001
Protocols and guidelines in critical care: development and implementation.
Variation in clinical management has been associated with suboptimal outcomes and increased costs. Guidelines, protocols, and clinical pathways have evolved as a strategy to standardize care, principally by limiting variation, thereby reducing complications, decreasing length of stay and improving outcomes. However, the nature of critical care makes it difficult to conduct blinded, randomized, and controlled clinical trials, the specific type of science required for evidenced-based medicine and guideline development. Areas in which ICU-based guidelines have been successful include, among others, sedation and neuromuscular blockade use, ventilator management, antibiotic selection, and vascular surgical interventions.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2001
Impact of critical care physician workforce for intensive care unit physician staffing.
The Society for Critical Care Medicine has advocated for intensivist lead multi-disciplinary critical care for our 30 years; growing evidence supports their assertion. It is estimated that if intensive care unit (ICU) physician staffing (IPS) was implemented in non-rural United States hospitals, 53,000 lives and $5.4 billion would be saved annually. ⋯ In this essay, we discuss issues regarding the future supply of and demand for critical care physicians beginning with an overview of how to evaluate physician supply and demand in general. We then discuss supply and demand for critical care physicians considering emerging issues such as the Leapfrog standard that may impact estimates of the supply and demand for critical care physicians.