Articles: intensive-care-units.
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Ann R Coll Surg Engl · Nov 1984
The provision of junior anaesthetic staff for the intensive care unit of a district general hospital: a workable solution?
The problems of staffing an ICU in a District General Hospital at junior level are discussed. The needs of the Unit, the junior staff and the Anaesthetic Department and possible ways of reconciling these are outlined. A system of providing cover using pairs of junior anaesthetists is described in detail. This has been successfully in operation for 18 months and its merits are discussed.
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To determine whether on-site physician staffing changed test and procedure use and improved patient outcome in a community hospital intensive care unit (ICU), we studied all ICU admissions for matched periods before and after the staffing change. Compared with the 463 year-1 patients, the 491 year-2 patients were no more likely to receive life-support interventions (respirators, dialysis, or pacemakers), but had substantially more monitoring interventions, such as pulmonary artery catheters (22% v 2%, P less than .0001) and arterial catheters (9% v 0%, P less than .0001). After controlling for factors that predicted death (age, mental status at time of admission, reason for ICU admission), year-2 patients were significantly more likely to survive the ICU and subsequent hospital stay (P = .01). Nearly all of the improvement of survival rate took place among patients with intermediate likelihoods of death; this improved survival rate persisted at the 12-month follow-up (P = .01).
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Neonatal intensive care requires continuous close monitoring of several physiological parameters. The machinery involved is complex but has to be understood by medical staff with the minimum of training in its use. Failure of correct application and interpretation of results can be dangerous for the sick or preterm infant.
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Comparative Study
Nursing home patients admitted to a medical intensive care unit.
To investigate admissions from nursing homes to a medical intensive care unit (ICU), the authors detailed the major interventions, costs, and outcomes for such patients (n = 67) over a 3-year period and then compared them with those for ICU patients receiving home care or visiting nurse services (240 patients) before admission and all others older than 65 years of age (949 patients). These three groups comprised 37% of total ICU admissions. ⋯ In-hospital mortality for the nursing home group (28%) was significantly higher than for the home care group (7%) and others older than 65 years of age (7%). Cumulative mortality for the nursing home group reached 66% by 8 months, versus 32% and 26% in the other groups, respectively.