AACN clinical issues
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AACN clinical issues · Nov 1997
Case ReportsNeutralizing ageism in critical care via outcomes research.
Ageism, as a mind-set, amplifies a belief that intensive care for the elderly is ineffectual. However, there are little data to support the notion that advanced chronological age alone predicts unfavorable outcomes in response to intensive care. A lack of outcome data, combined with ageism, may place older patients at risk for rationing of intensive care. ⋯ However, as pressure to reduce health care costs increases, critically ill elderly patients may be targeted for rationing. In this context, outcomes research involving elderly populations is crucial. The purpose of this report is to explicate the risk of ageism in the delivery of intensive care and to describe methods for implementing outcomes assessment for critically ill elderly patients as an essential element in a continuum of care.
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AACN clinical issues · Nov 1997
A collaborative approach to fetal assessment in the adult intensive care unit.
When a pregnant woman is admitted to the adult intensive care unit (ICU), responsibility for fetal assessment must be assumed by a nurse who is competent in interpreting data obtained by auscultation of the fetal heart rate or by the electronic fetal monitor. The fetus is a distinct patient requiring assessments, interventions, and evaluation, including documentation of nursing care provided, similar to any patient in the ICU setting. ⋯ Therefore, in institutions in which critically ill pregnant women are transferred to the adult ICU, a formal plan should be in place that includes care provided by nurses who are competent in fetal assessment. This article describes a collaborative approach to ensure that fetal assessments are performed by nurses who have the experience and education to do so and includes common terminology used to describe fetal status so that ICU nurses are familiar with the language and appropriate nursing intervention.
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Chest pain is the initial symptom of many life-threatening disease processes. Pain may arise from any structure located in the thoracic cavity. ⋯ Diseases that require immediate attention and intervention are myocardial infarction/unstable angina, dissecting aortic aneurysm, pericarditis, pulmonary embolism, pneumothorax, pneumonia, and acute chest syndrome. In order to evaluate a patient with the complaint of chest pain, the advanced practice nurse must be familiar with the differential diagnosis approach to acute chest pain.
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Agitation is a frequent clinical problem that adds significant morbidity to the hospital course. Agitation is usually part of an ambiguous constellation of cognitive and psychiatric symptoms, with a fluctuating clinical course. Observation of vastly different symptoms occurring at different times leads to misdiagnosis or underrecognition of serious underlying disorders. ⋯ Risk factors attributable to hospitalization include pain, anxiety, and stressors endemic to intensive care. Agitated states may have multiple causes, and each potential contributor must be pursued and treated independently. Definitive diagnosis is dependent on a comprehensive history, patient observation, physical examination, and selective diagnostic studies.
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Advanced practice nurses are responsible for diagnosing and treating patients with acute onset hypotension. The potential diagnostic hypotheses for hypotension are related to a wide variety of pathophysiologic processes. ⋯ The clinician bases these decisions on information contained in a subjective and objective database and on recognizing patterns in the central findings. However, treatment of hypotension may be necessary before or during the diagnostic process, depending on the severity of the patient's symptoms.