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The Organization of Critical Care. an Evidence-Based Approach to Improving Quality (Respiratory Medicine, Vol. 18)
Scales, D. — Rubenfeld, G.
1ª Edición Agosto 2014
Inglés
Tapa dura
274 pags
1000 gr
16 x 24 x null cm
ISBN 9781493908103
Editorial HUMANA PRESS
LIBRO IMPRESO
-5%
103,99 €98,79 €IVA incluido
99,99 €94,99 €IVA no incluido
Recíbelo en un plazo de
2 - 3 semanas
ABOUT THIS BOOK
· Evidence-based and comprehensive survey of the organization and function
of intensive care units
· Suggests a range of improvements to consider in the physical layout
and design of intensive care units
· Includes techniques for integrating subspecialists’ knowledge
for providing care to specific patient groups in the ICU
· Discusses ethical issues related to providing critical care in regions
with scarce resources
The origin of modern intensive care units (ICUs) has frequently been attributed
to the widespread provision of mechanical ventilation within dedicated hospital
areas during the 1952 Copenhagen polio epidemic. However, modern ICUs have developed
to treat or monitor patients who have any severe, life-threatening disease or
injury. These patients receive specialized care and vital organ assistance such
as mechanical ventilation, cardiovascular support, or hemodialysis. ICU patients
now typically occupy approximately 10% of inpatient acute care beds, yet the
structure and organization of these ICUs can be quite different across hospitals.
In The Organization of Critical Care: An Evidence-Based Approach to Improving
Quality, leaders provide a concise, evidence-based review of ICU organizational
factors that have been associated with improved patient (or other) outcomes.
The topics covered are grouped according to four broad domains: (1) the organization,
structure, and staffing of an ICU; (2) organizational approaches to improving
quality of care in an ICU; (3) integrating ICU care with other healthcare provided
within the hospital and across the broader healthcare system; and (4) international
perspectives on critical care delivery. Each chapter summarizes a different
aspect of ICU organization and targets individual clinicians and healthcare
decision makers. A long overdue contribution to the field, The Organization
of Critical Care: An Evidence-Based Approach to Improving Quality is an indispensable
guide for all clinicians and health administrators concerned with achieving
state-of-the-art outcomes for intensive care.
Content Level » Professional/practitioner
Keywords » Critical Care - Healthcare - ICU - Intervention - Observation
- Treatment
Related subjects » Critical Care & Emergency Medicine
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I - Organizing Intensive Care
Ch.1: Organizational Change in Critical Care: The Next Magic Bullet?
Gordon D. Rubenfeld, Damon C. Scales
Ch.2: Origins of the Critically iIll: The Impetus for Critical Care Medicine
Matthew Rosengart, Michael R. Pinsky
Ch.3: Intensivist and Alternative Models of ICU Staffing
Hayley B. Gershengorn, Allan Garland
Ch.4: Health Professionals in Critical Care
Timothy G. Buchman
Ch.5: Computers in Intensive Care
Stephen E. Lapinsky
Ch.6: Integrating Subspecialty Expertise in the Intensive Care Unit
Jason Katz
II - Improving Intensive Care
Ch.7: Quality Improvement in the Intensive Care Unit
Christopher Dale, J. Randall Curtis
Ch.8: Facilitating Interactions between Healthcare Providers in the ICU
Andre Carlos Kajdacsy-Balla Amaral
Ch.9: Teamwork and Leadership in the Critical Care Unit
Tom W Reader, Brian H Cuthbertson
Ch. 10: Caring for ICU Providers
Ruth M. Kleinpell, Omar B. Lateef, Gourang P. Patel
III - Integrating Intensive Care
Ch. 11: Rationing without Contemplation: Why Attention to Patient Flow is Important
and How to Make it Better
Michael Howell, Jennifer Stevens
Ch. 12: Rapid Response Systems
Ken Hillman, Jack Chen
Ch. 13: The Chronically Critically Ill
Shannon S. Carson, Kathleen Dalton
Ch. 14: Regionalization of Critical Care
Theodore J. Iwashyna, Jeremy M. Kahn
Ch. 15: International Perspectives on Critical Care
Hannah Wunsch
Ch. 16: Critical Care in Low–Resource Settings
Srinivas Murthy, Sadat A. Sayeed, Neil Adhikari
IV - Critical Care - Global and Future Perspectives
Ch. 17: Disaster Planning for the Intensive Care Unit: A Critical Framework
Daniel B. Jamieson, Lee Daugherty Biddison
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