Resp Care
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The chronically critically ill (CCI) comprise a rapidly growing population of patients who have survived acute critical illness, only to be left with ongoing organ dysfunctions requiring high levels of specialized care for months or years. In many ways, CCI is an "iatrogenic" process, reflecting the ability of modern life support technologies to keep patients alive for prolonged periods of time despite ongoing life threatening illness. ⋯ Importantly, CCI patients transition among these venues frequently, reflecting the nature of CCI to be punctuated with episodes of acute critical illness. Management of the CCI population requires a special combination of intensive care and rehabilitative skills.
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Patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation are rapidly increasing in number. Improved ICU care has resulted in many patients surviving acute respiratory failure to require prolonged mechanical ventilation during convalescence. Also, mechanical ventilation is increasingly used as a therapeutic option for patients with symptomatic chronic hypoventilation, with an increased effort to predict nocturnal hypoventilation to initiate ventilation earlier. ⋯ These factors point to a likely increase in the number of patients receiving home mechanical ventilation in the United States. Unfortunately, there are no comprehensive databases or national registry of home ventilator patients-therefore the number of home ventilator patients is unknown. There are real challenges to providing mechanical ventilation in the home, which include caregiver training, adequacy of respiratory care, and reimbursement.
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An estimated 2-3% of all hospitalized patients become critically ill. These patients are in a state of relative immune exhaustion, which cripples their response to infections. Patients are sicker, have many comorbidities, and undergo complex procedures. ⋯ In addition, specific attention is required to environmental services and surface and equipment cleaning. A well organized infection control program and an antimicrobial stewardship program have become indispensable to achieve these goals. All of these key principles and recommendations are also relevant to the chronically ill patient in acute care hospital ICUs and step-down units.
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Patients who are chronically critically ill constitute 5-10% of patients with acute respiratory failure but demand a disproportionate share of ICU resources. Epidemiologic studies and clinical trials require definitions for enrollment, and a uniform definition would be ideal to allow comparisons between studies. While a consensus definition exists (≥ 21 consecutive days of mechanical ventilation for ≥ 6 h/d), many study designs have required alternative definitions that include requirement for a tracheostomy, a different period of mechanical ventilation, or admission to a weaning facility. ⋯ New clinical prediction rules have been developed to better identify patients who are at high risk and low risk of death. These models could be enhanced by data on functional outcomes for survivors. The healthcare system has been adapting to the increase in chronic critical illness by increasing critical beds in short-term and long-term acute care hospitals, but continued monitoring of resources will be necessary, since the prevalence of chronic critical illness is expected to increase further.