Articles: intensive-care-units.
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Intensive care nursing · Sep 1990
Case ReportsThe use of a multidisciplinary group meeting for families of critically ill trauma patients.
Family members of any trauma patient admitted to the Level I trauma center are invited by the trauma staff to attend weekly multidisciplinary meetings. By the use of these meetings, family concerns can become a positive care factor and the tasks of nurses, doctors and social workers alike made easier.
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Critical care medicine · Sep 1990
Expansion of the medical intensive care unit: clinical consequences in a large urban hospital.
We examined how a permanent expansion of the medical ICU (MICU) affected resource utilization and severity of illness for intensive care admissions within a 700-bed urban teaching hospital. On our 162-bed medical service, construction of a separate cardiac care unit and the expansion of the MICU increased the number of core intensive care beds by 100%. We prospectively analyzed noncardiology MICU admissions 2 months before, immediately after, and 4 months after MICU expansion. ⋯ In contrast, the volume and severity of illness of MICU transfers from the inpatient medical floor service were constant in all time periods. These results suggest that, while MICU expansion increased patient volume, physician utilization of the MICU resources was unchanged. Our physicians used high-intensity ICU beds in a consistent fashion in response to external factors, such as ED activity, intramural ICU transfers, and referrals from other hospitals.
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To determine the long-term outcome of children admitted to a pediatric ICU (PICU), we studied 976 consecutive patients admitted to our PICU in the 12 months ending June 30, 1983, and evaluated their outcome 30 to 36 months after PICU admission. There was no relationship between duration of PICU admission and outcome. ⋯ Of the 974 children available for follow-up, 20% died, 5% had a severe handicap, 2% had a moderate handicap, 12% had a mild handicap, 17% were functionally normal but required medical supervision, and 42% were normal. Thus, 80% of the children survived 30 months or more, and 91% of the survivors will probably lead an independent life.
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The Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and the Society of Critical Care Medicine call on the physician medical director of the intensive care unit (ICU) to play an important role in admission and discharge decision-making. To assess nursing perception of the medical director's involvement in this decision-making, we analyzed data from a questionnaire administered at an annual ICU management conference to ICU nursing supervisors representing 101 hospitals and 137 ICUs. ⋯ In the 54 ICUs with full-time medical directors, nurses in approximately 30% of the units said that there was no nighttime availability of the medical director or designee. The data suggest that many ICUs lack physician leadership in ICU management and resource allocation.