fbpx
Wikipedia

Intensive care unit

An intensive care unit (ICU), also known as an intensive therapy unit or intensive treatment unit (ITU) or critical care unit (CCU), is a special department of a hospital or health care facility that provides intensive care medicine.

Intensive care unit
ICU patients often require mechanical ventilation if they have lost the ability to breathe normally.

Intensive care units cater to patients with severe or life-threatening illnesses and injuries, which require constant care, close supervision from life support equipment and medication in order to ensure normal bodily functions. They are staffed by highly trained physicians, nurses and respiratory therapists who specialize in caring for critically ill patients. ICUs are also distinguished from general hospital wards by a higher staff-to-patient ratio and access to advanced medical resources and equipment that is not routinely available elsewhere. Common conditions that are treated within ICUs include respiratory and cardiovascular , as well as neurology .

Patients may be referred directly from an emergency department or from a ward if they rapidly deteriorate, or immediately after surgery if the surgery is very invasive and the patient is at high risk of complications.[1]

History

In 1854, Florence Nightingale left for the Crimean War, where triage was used to separate seriously wounded soldiers from those with non-life-threatening conditions.

Until recently,[when?] it was reported that Nightingale’s method reduced mortality from 40% to 2% on the battlefield. Although this was not the case, her experiences during the war formed the foundation for her later discovery of the importance of sanitary conditions in hospitals, a critical component of intensive care.

In 1950, anesthesiologist Peter Safar established the concept of advanced life support, keeping patients sedated and ventilated in an intensive care environment. Safar is considered to be the first practitioner of intensive care medicine as a speciality.

In response to a polio epidemic (where many patients required constant ventilation and surveillance), Bjørn Aage Ibsen established the first intensive care unit globally in Copenhagen in 1953.[2][3]

The first application of this idea in the United States was in 1955 by William Mosenthal, a surgeon at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.[4] In the 1960s, the importance of cardiac arrhythmias as a source of morbidity and mortality in myocardial infarctions (heart attacks) was recognized. This led to the routine use of cardiac monitoring in ICUs, especially after heart attacks.[5]

Types

Hospitals may have various specialized ICUs that cater to a specific medical requirement or patient:

Name Description
Coronary care unit Caters to patients specifically with life-threatening cardiac conditions such as a myocardial infarction or a cardiac arrest.
Critical care unit Some large hospital trauma centers, especially but not exclusively in the United States, divide their main ICU, and perhaps even the other ICUs they may have, into sections that cater to those needing regular intensive care (the regular ICU), and those who are extremely unstable or near death, needing an even higher level of care (the critical care unit, or section).
Geriatric intensive-care unit A special intensive care unit dedicated to management of critically ill elderly.
High dependency unit An intermediate ward for patients who require close observation, treatment and nursing care that cannot be provided in a general ward, but whose care is not at a critical stage to warrant an ICU bed. It is utilised until a patient's condition stabilizes to qualify for discharge to a general ward or recovery unit. It may also be called an intermediate care area, step-down unit, or progressive care unit.[6]
Isolation intensive care unit An intensive care unit for patients with suspected or diagnosed contagious diseases that require medical isolation.
Mobile intensive care unit (MICU) A specialized ambulance with the team and equipment to provide on-scene advanced life support and intensive care during transportation. Mobile ICUs are generally used for people who are being transferred from hospitals and from home to a hospital. In the Anglo-American model of pre-hospitalisation care mobile ICUs are generally crewed by specialised advanced life support paramedics. In the European model, mobile ICU teams are usually led by a nurse and physician.
Neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) Cares for neonatal patients who have not left the hospital after birth. Common conditions cared for include prematurity and associated complications, congenital disorders such as congenital diaphragmatic hernia, or complications resulting from the birthing process.
Neurological intensive care unit Patients are treated for traumatic brain and spinal injury, subarachnoid hemorrhage, brain tumors, stroke, rattlesnake bites and post surgical patients who have undergone various neurological surgeries performed by experienced neurosurgeons require constant neurological exams. Nurses who work within these units have neurological certifications. Once the patients are stable and removed from the ventilator, they are transferred to a neurological care unit.
Pediatric intensive care unit Pediatric patients are treated in this intensive care unit for life-threatening conditions such as asthma, influenza, diabetic ketoacidosis, or traumatic neurological injury. Surgical cases may also be referred following a surgery if the patient has a potential for rapid deterioration or if the patient requires monitoring, such as spinal infusions or surgeries involving the respiratory system such as removal of the tonsils or adenoids. Some facilities also have specialized pediatric cardiac intensive care units where patients with congenital heart disease are treated. These units also typically cater for cardiac transplantation and postoperative cardiac catheterization patients if those services are offered at the hospital.
Post-anesthesia care unit Provides immediate post-op observation and stabilisation of patients following surgical operations and anesthesia. Patients are usually held in such facilities for a limited amount of time and have to meet set physiological aspects before being transferred back to a ward with a qualified nurse escort. Owing to high patient flow in recovery units, and to the bed management cycle, if a patient breaches a time frame and is too unstable to be transferred back to a ward, they are normally transferred to an intensive care unit in order to receive progressive treatment.
Psychiatric intensive care unit Patients who may voluntarily harm themselves are brought here for more vigorous monitoring.
Surgical intensive care unit A specialized service in larger hospitals that provides inpatient care for critically ill patients on surgical services. As opposed to other ICUs, the care is managed by surgeons or anesthesiologists trained in critical-care.
Trauma intensive care unit These are found in hospitals certified in treating major trauma with a dedicated trauma team equipped with the expertise to deal with serious complications.
 
Nurses in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU)
 
A pediatric intensive care unit room at Helen Devos Children's Hospital.
 
US Army ICU nurse attending to a patient in Baghdad, Iraq
 
ICU nurses monitoring patients from a central computer station. This allows for rapid intervention should a patient's condition deteriorate whilst a member of staff is not immediately at the bedside.
 
Mobile ICU of the university hospital in Antwerp, Belgium

Equipment and systems

Common equipment in an ICU includes mechanical ventilators to assist breathing through an endotracheal tube or a tracheostomy tube; cardiac monitors for monitoring Cardiac condition; equipment for the constant monitoring of bodily functions; a web of intravenous lines, feeding tubes, nasogastric tubes, suction pumps, drains, and catheters, syringe pumps; and a wide array of drugs to treat the primary condition(s) of hospitalization. Medically induced comas, analgesics, and induced sedation are common ICU tools needed and used to reduce pain and prevent secondary infections.

Quality of care

The available data suggests a relation between ICU volume and quality of care for mechanically ventilated patients.[7] After adjustment for severity of illnesses, demographic variables, and characteristics of different ICUs (including staffing by intensivists), higher ICU staffing was significantly associated with lower ICU and hospital mortality rates. A ratio of 2 patients to 1 nurse is recommended for a medical ICU, which contrasts to the ratio of 4:1 or 5:1 typically seen on medical floors. This varies from country to country, though; e.g., in Australia and the United Kingdom, most ICUs are staffed on a 2:1 basis (for high-dependency patients who require closer monitoring or more intensive treatment than a hospital ward can offer) or on a 1:1 basis for patients requiring extreme intensive support and monitoring; for example, a patient on a mechanical ventilator with associated anaesthetics or sedation such as propofol, midazolam and use of strong analgesics such as morphine, fentanyl and/or remifentanil.

International guidelines recommend that every patient gets checked for delirium every day (usually twice or as much required) using a validated clinical tool. The two most widely used are the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU) and the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist (ICDSC). There are translations of these tools in over 20 languages and they are used globally in many ICU's.[8]

Operational logistics

In the United States, up to 20% of hospital beds can be labelled as intensive-care beds; in the United Kingdom, intensive care usually will comprise only up to 2% of total beds. This high disparity is attributed to admission of patients in the UK only when considered the most severely ill.[9]

Intensive care is an expensive healthcare service. A recent study conducted in the United States found that hospital stays involving ICU services were 2.5 times more costly than other hospital stays.[10]

In the United Kingdom in 2003–04, the average cost of funding an intensive care unit was:[11]

  • £838 per bed per day for a neonatal intensive care unit
  • £1,702 per bed per day for a pediatric intensive care unit
  • £1,328 per bed per day for an adult intensive care unit

Remote collaboration systems

Some hospitals have installed teleconferencing systems that allow doctors and nurses at a central facility (either in the same building, at a central location serving several local hospitals, or in rural locations another more urban facility) to collaborate with on-site staff and speak with patients (a form of telemedicine). This is variously called an eICU, virtual ICU, or tele-ICU. Remote staff typically have access to vital signs from live monitoring systems, and telectronic health records so they may have access to a broader view of a patient's medical history. Often bedside and remote staff have met in person and may rotate responsibilities. Such systems are beneficial to intensive care units in order to ensure correct procedures are being followed for patients vulnerable to deterioration, to access vital signs remotely in order to keep patients that would have to be transferred to a larger facility if need be he/she may have demonstrated a significant decrease in stability.[12][13][14][15]

See also

References

  1. ^ Smith, S. E. (2013-03-24). Bronwyn Harris (ed.). "What is an ICU". wiseGEEK. Sparks, Nevada: Conjecture Corporation. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
  2. ^ Reisner-Sénélar, L. (2009), "Der dänische Anästhesist Björn Ibsen ein Pionier der Langzeitbeatmung über die oberen Luftwege", Doctoral Thesis (in German), Frankfurt am Main, Germany: Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, OCLC 600186486. Translation of introduction available here [1].
  3. ^ Reisner-Sénélar, L. (2009). "The Danish anaesthesiologist was a pioneer of long-term ventilation on the upper airways" (PDF).[dead link]
  4. ^ Grossman, D.C. (Spring 2004). "Vital Signs: Remembering Dr. William Mosenthal: A simple idea from a special surgeon". Dartmouth Medicine. 28 (3). Retrieved 2007-04-10.
  5. ^ "História da Terapia Intensiva" [Intensive Care History] (video in English linked to from website). Brazilian Society of Critical Care website. Produced by Tfran Ediçao de Imagens. Uploaded to YouTube by user: Thiago Francisco. 2008-06-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ , healthtalkonline.org, Oxford, England: DIPEx, November 2012, archived from the original (compiled patient testimonials) on 2013-03-28, retrieved 2012-04-10
  7. ^ Kahn, J.M.; Goss, C.H.; Heagerty, P.J.; Kramer, A.A.; et al. (2006-07-06). "Hospital volume and the outcomes of mechanical ventilation". New England Journal of Medicine. 355 (1): 41–50. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa053993. PMID 16822995.
  8. ^ Ely, EW; et al. (2001-12-05). "Delirium in mechanically ventilated patients: validity and reliability of the confusion assessment method for the intensive care unit (CAM-ICU)". JAMA. 286 (21): 2703–10. doi:10.1001/jama.286.21.2703. PMID 11730446.
  9. ^ Bennett, D.; Bion, J. (1999). "Organisation of intensive care". BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.). 318 (7196): 1468–70. doi:10.1136/bmj.318.7196.1468. PMC 1115845. PMID 10346777.
  10. ^ Barrett ML, Smith MW, Elizhauser A, Honigman LS, Pines JM (December 2014). "Utilization of Intensive Care Services, 2011". HCUP Statistical Brief #185. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. PMID 25654157.
  11. ^ Winterton, R. (2005-06-15), , Hansard – House of Commons Debates, Westminster, England: Stationery Office, Parliament, vol. 435, part 87, column 520W, archived from the original on 2011-06-05, retrieved 2009-01-17.
  12. ^ "Hospitals Monitor ICU Patients Virtually, From Many Miles Away". WFAE. 2013-05-06. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  13. ^ . Perspectives.ahima.org. 2014-06-20. Archived from the original on 2017-02-28. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  14. ^ "Emerging Best Practices for Tele-ICU Care". CHCF.org. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  15. ^ Goran, Susan F. (1 August 2010). "A Second Set of Eyes: An Introduction to Tele-ICU". Crit Care Nurse. 30 (4): 46–55. doi:10.4037/ccn2010283. PMID 20675821. S2CID 43905861.

Further reading

External links

  • "Intensive Care". NHS choices. UK: National Health Service. 2017-10-18.
  • "Critical Care". MedlinePlus. US: National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.
  • Society of Critical Care Medicine
  • ICUsteps – Intensive care patient support charity
  • Organisation for Critical Care Transportation 2011-09-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • Reynolds, H.N.; Rogove, H.; Bander, J.; McCambridge, M.; et al. (December 2011). "A working lexicon for the tele-intensive care unit: We need to define tele-intensive care unit to grow and understand it" (PDF). Telemedicine and E-Health. 17 (10): 773–783. doi:10.1089/tmj.2011.0045. hdl:2027.42/90470. PMID 22029748.
  • Olson, Terrah J. Paul; Brasel, Karen J.; Redmann, Andrew J.; Alexander, G. Caleb; Schwarze, Margaret L. (January 2013). "Surgeon-Reported Conflict With Intensivists About Postoperative Goals of Care". JAMA Surgery. 148 (1): 29–35. doi:10.1001/jamasurgery.2013.403. PMC 3624604. PMID 23324837.

intensive, care, unit, confused, with, emergency, department, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification,. Not to be confused with emergency department This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Intensive care unit news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message An intensive care unit ICU also known as an intensive therapy unit or intensive treatment unit ITU or critical care unit CCU is a special department of a hospital or health care facility that provides intensive care medicine Intensive care unit ICU patients often require mechanical ventilation if they have lost the ability to breathe normally Intensive care units cater to patients with severe or life threatening illnesses and injuries which require constant care close supervision from life support equipment and medication in order to ensure normal bodily functions They are staffed by highly trained physicians nurses and respiratory therapists who specialize in caring for critically ill patients ICUs are also distinguished from general hospital wards by a higher staff to patient ratio and access to advanced medical resources and equipment that is not routinely available elsewhere Common conditions that are treated within ICUs include respiratory and cardiovascular as well as neurology Patients may be referred directly from an emergency department or from a ward if they rapidly deteriorate or immediately after surgery if the surgery is very invasive and the patient is at high risk of complications 1 Contents 1 History 2 Types 3 Equipment and systems 4 Quality of care 5 Operational logistics 6 Remote collaboration systems 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditSee also Intensive care medicine In 1854 Florence Nightingale left for the Crimean War where triage was used to separate seriously wounded soldiers from those with non life threatening conditions Until recently when it was reported that Nightingale s method reduced mortality from 40 to 2 on the battlefield Although this was not the case her experiences during the war formed the foundation for her later discovery of the importance of sanitary conditions in hospitals a critical component of intensive care In 1950 anesthesiologist Peter Safar established the concept of advanced life support keeping patients sedated and ventilated in an intensive care environment Safar is considered to be the first practitioner of intensive care medicine as a speciality In response to a polio epidemic where many patients required constant ventilation and surveillance Bjorn Aage Ibsen established the first intensive care unit globally in Copenhagen in 1953 2 3 The first application of this idea in the United States was in 1955 by William Mosenthal a surgeon at the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center 4 In the 1960s the importance of cardiac arrhythmias as a source of morbidity and mortality in myocardial infarctions heart attacks was recognized This led to the routine use of cardiac monitoring in ICUs especially after heart attacks 5 Types EditHospitals may have various specialized ICUs that cater to a specific medical requirement or patient Name DescriptionCoronary care unit Caters to patients specifically with life threatening cardiac conditions such as a myocardial infarction or a cardiac arrest Critical care unit Some large hospital trauma centers especially but not exclusively in the United States divide their main ICU and perhaps even the other ICUs they may have into sections that cater to those needing regular intensive care the regular ICU and those who are extremely unstable or near death needing an even higher level of care the critical care unit or section Geriatric intensive care unit A special intensive care unit dedicated to management of critically ill elderly High dependency unit An intermediate ward for patients who require close observation treatment and nursing care that cannot be provided in a general ward but whose care is not at a critical stage to warrant an ICU bed It is utilised until a patient s condition stabilizes to qualify for discharge to a general ward or recovery unit It may also be called an intermediate care area step down unit or progressive care unit 6 Isolation intensive care unit An intensive care unit for patients with suspected or diagnosed contagious diseases that require medical isolation Mobile intensive care unit MICU A specialized ambulance with the team and equipment to provide on scene advanced life support and intensive care during transportation Mobile ICUs are generally used for people who are being transferred from hospitals and from home to a hospital In the Anglo American model of pre hospitalisation care mobile ICUs are generally crewed by specialised advanced life support paramedics In the European model mobile ICU teams are usually led by a nurse and physician Neonatal intensive care unit NICU Cares for neonatal patients who have not left the hospital after birth Common conditions cared for include prematurity and associated complications congenital disorders such as congenital diaphragmatic hernia or complications resulting from the birthing process Neurological intensive care unit Patients are treated for traumatic brain and spinal injury subarachnoid hemorrhage brain tumors stroke rattlesnake bites and post surgical patients who have undergone various neurological surgeries performed by experienced neurosurgeons require constant neurological exams Nurses who work within these units have neurological certifications Once the patients are stable and removed from the ventilator they are transferred to a neurological care unit Pediatric intensive care unit Pediatric patients are treated in this intensive care unit for life threatening conditions such as asthma influenza diabetic ketoacidosis or traumatic neurological injury Surgical cases may also be referred following a surgery if the patient has a potential for rapid deterioration or if the patient requires monitoring such as spinal infusions or surgeries involving the respiratory system such as removal of the tonsils or adenoids Some facilities also have specialized pediatric cardiac intensive care units where patients with congenital heart disease are treated These units also typically cater for cardiac transplantation and postoperative cardiac catheterization patients if those services are offered at the hospital Post anesthesia care unit Provides immediate post op observation and stabilisation of patients following surgical operations and anesthesia Patients are usually held in such facilities for a limited amount of time and have to meet set physiological aspects before being transferred back to a ward with a qualified nurse escort Owing to high patient flow in recovery units and to the bed management cycle if a patient breaches a time frame and is too unstable to be transferred back to a ward they are normally transferred to an intensive care unit in order to receive progressive treatment Psychiatric intensive care unit Patients who may voluntarily harm themselves are brought here for more vigorous monitoring Surgical intensive care unit A specialized service in larger hospitals that provides inpatient care for critically ill patients on surgical services As opposed to other ICUs the care is managed by surgeons or anesthesiologists trained in critical care Trauma intensive care unit These are found in hospitals certified in treating major trauma with a dedicated trauma team equipped with the expertise to deal with serious complications Nurses in a neonatal intensive care unit NICU A pediatric intensive care unit room at Helen Devos Children s Hospital US Army ICU nurse attending to a patient in Baghdad Iraq ICU nurses monitoring patients from a central computer station This allows for rapid intervention should a patient s condition deteriorate whilst a member of staff is not immediately at the bedside Mobile ICU of the university hospital in Antwerp BelgiumEquipment and systems EditCommon equipment in an ICU includes mechanical ventilators to assist breathing through an endotracheal tube or a tracheostomy tube cardiac monitors for monitoring Cardiac condition equipment for the constant monitoring of bodily functions a web of intravenous lines feeding tubes nasogastric tubes suction pumps drains and catheters syringe pumps and a wide array of drugs to treat the primary condition s of hospitalization Medically induced comas analgesics and induced sedation are common ICU tools needed and used to reduce pain and prevent secondary infections Quality of care EditThe available data suggests a relation between ICU volume and quality of care for mechanically ventilated patients 7 After adjustment for severity of illnesses demographic variables and characteristics of different ICUs including staffing by intensivists higher ICU staffing was significantly associated with lower ICU and hospital mortality rates A ratio of 2 patients to 1 nurse is recommended for a medical ICU which contrasts to the ratio of 4 1 or 5 1 typically seen on medical floors This varies from country to country though e g in Australia and the United Kingdom most ICUs are staffed on a 2 1 basis for high dependency patients who require closer monitoring or more intensive treatment than a hospital ward can offer or on a 1 1 basis for patients requiring extreme intensive support and monitoring for example a patient on a mechanical ventilator with associated anaesthetics or sedation such as propofol midazolam and use of strong analgesics such as morphine fentanyl and or remifentanil International guidelines recommend that every patient gets checked for delirium every day usually twice or as much required using a validated clinical tool The two most widely used are the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU CAM ICU and the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist ICDSC There are translations of these tools in over 20 languages and they are used globally in many ICU s 8 Operational logistics EditIn the United States up to 20 of hospital beds can be labelled as intensive care beds in the United Kingdom intensive care usually will comprise only up to 2 of total beds This high disparity is attributed to admission of patients in the UK only when considered the most severely ill 9 Intensive care is an expensive healthcare service A recent study conducted in the United States found that hospital stays involving ICU services were 2 5 times more costly than other hospital stays 10 In the United Kingdom in 2003 04 the average cost of funding an intensive care unit was 11 838 per bed per day for a neonatal intensive care unit 1 702 per bed per day for a pediatric intensive care unit 1 328 per bed per day for an adult intensive care unitRemote collaboration systems EditSome hospitals have installed teleconferencing systems that allow doctors and nurses at a central facility either in the same building at a central location serving several local hospitals or in rural locations another more urban facility to collaborate with on site staff and speak with patients a form of telemedicine This is variously called an eICU virtual ICU or tele ICU Remote staff typically have access to vital signs from live monitoring systems and telectronic health records so they may have access to a broader view of a patient s medical history Often bedside and remote staff have met in person and may rotate responsibilities Such systems are beneficial to intensive care units in order to ensure correct procedures are being followed for patients vulnerable to deterioration to access vital signs remotely in order to keep patients that would have to be transferred to a larger facility if need be he she may have demonstrated a significant decrease in stability 12 13 14 15 See also EditICU quality and management tools Intensive Care Foundation a charity in Australia and New Zealand Intensive Care Medicine journal Open source ventilatorReferences Edit Smith S E 2013 03 24 Bronwyn Harris ed What is an ICU wiseGEEK Sparks Nevada Conjecture Corporation Retrieved 2012 06 15 Reisner Senelar L 2009 Der danische Anasthesist Bjorn Ibsen ein Pionier der Langzeitbeatmung uber die oberen Luftwege Doctoral Thesis in German Frankfurt am Main Germany Johann Wolfgang Goethe University OCLC 600186486 Translation of introduction available here 1 Reisner Senelar L 2009 The Danish anaesthesiologist was a pioneer of long term ventilation on the upper airways PDF dead link Grossman D C Spring 2004 Vital Signs Remembering Dr William Mosenthal A simple idea from a special surgeon Dartmouth Medicine 28 3 Retrieved 2007 04 10 Historia da Terapia Intensiva Intensive Care History video in English linked to from website Brazilian Society of Critical Care website Produced by Tfran Edicao de Imagens Uploaded to YouTube by user Thiago Francisco 2008 06 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Intensive Care Patients Experiences High Dependency Units healthtalkonline org Oxford England DIPEx November 2012 archived from the original compiled patient testimonials on 2013 03 28 retrieved 2012 04 10 Kahn J M Goss C H Heagerty P J Kramer A A et al 2006 07 06 Hospital volume and the outcomes of mechanical ventilation New England Journal of Medicine 355 1 41 50 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa053993 PMID 16822995 Ely EW et al 2001 12 05 Delirium in mechanically ventilated patients validity and reliability of the confusion assessment method for the intensive care unit CAM ICU JAMA 286 21 2703 10 doi 10 1001 jama 286 21 2703 PMID 11730446 Bennett D Bion J 1999 Organisation of intensive care BMJ Clinical Research Ed 318 7196 1468 70 doi 10 1136 bmj 318 7196 1468 PMC 1115845 PMID 10346777 Barrett ML Smith MW Elizhauser A Honigman LS Pines JM December 2014 Utilization of Intensive Care Services 2011 HCUP Statistical Brief 185 Rockville MD Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality PMID 25654157 Winterton R 2005 06 15 Written Answers text Trent Strategic Health Authority Hansard House of Commons Debates Westminster England Stationery Office Parliament vol 435 part 87 column 520W archived from the original on 2011 06 05 retrieved 2009 01 17 Hospitals Monitor ICU Patients Virtually From Many Miles Away WFAE 2013 05 06 Retrieved 2017 03 16 Tele ICU Efficacy and Cost Effectiveness of Remotely Managing Critical Care Perspectives Perspectives ahima org 2014 06 20 Archived from the original on 2017 02 28 Retrieved 2017 03 16 Emerging Best Practices for Tele ICU Care CHCF org Retrieved 2017 03 16 Goran Susan F 1 August 2010 A Second Set of Eyes An Introduction to Tele ICU Crit Care Nurse 30 4 46 55 doi 10 4037 ccn2010283 PMID 20675821 S2CID 43905861 Further reading EditLois Reynolds Tilli Tansey eds 2011 History of British Intensive Care c 1950 c 2000 Wellcome Witnesses to Contemporary Medicine History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group ISBN 978 0 902238 75 6 Wikidata Q29581786 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Intensive care units Intensive Care NHS choices UK National Health Service 2017 10 18 Critical Care MedlinePlus US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health Society of Critical Care Medicine ICUsteps Intensive care patient support charity Organisation for Critical Care Transportation Archived 2011 09 04 at the Wayback Machine Reynolds H N Rogove H Bander J McCambridge M et al December 2011 A working lexicon for the tele intensive care unit We need to define tele intensive care unit to grow and understand it PDF Telemedicine and E Health 17 10 773 783 doi 10 1089 tmj 2011 0045 hdl 2027 42 90470 PMID 22029748 Olson Terrah J Paul Brasel Karen J Redmann Andrew J Alexander G Caleb Schwarze Margaret L January 2013 Surgeon Reported Conflict With Intensivists About Postoperative Goals of Care JAMA Surgery 148 1 29 35 doi 10 1001 jamasurgery 2013 403 PMC 3624604 PMID 23324837 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intensive care unit amp oldid 1151189154, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.