1.Critical Care In Korea: Present and Future.
Chae Man LIM ; Sang Hyun KWAK ; Gee Young SUH ; Younsuck KOH
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(11):1540-1544
Critical (or intensive) care medicine (CCM) is a branch of medicine concerned with the care of patients with potentially reversible life-threatening conditions. Numerous studies have demonstrated that adequate staffing is of crucial importance for patient outcome. Adequate staffing also showed favorable cost-effectiveness in terms of ICU stay, decreased use of resources, and lower re-admission rates. The current status of CCM of our contry is not comparable to that of advanced countries. The global pandemic episodes in the past decade showed that our society is not well prepared for severe illnesses or mass casualty. To improve CCM in Korea, reimbursement of the government must be amended such that referral hospitals can hire sufficient number of qualified intensivists and nurses. For the government to address these urgent issues, public awareness of the role of CCM is also required.
Critical Care/*organization & administration
;
*Forecasting
;
Intensive Care Units/*organization & administration
;
Needs Assessment/*organization & administration
;
Republic of Korea
2.Thoughts over the construction of critical care medicine in a prefecture-grade tertiary-class A hospital: experience from Xinyang City, Henan Province.
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2019;31(3):264-265
The level of critical care medicine is an important index to measure the comprehensive strength of a modern hospital, and it is also a mirror to reflect the level of hospital management. Xinyang City of Henan Province is an old revolutionary district. Xinyang Central Hospital is a prefecture-grade tertiary-class A hospital which is certificated early in Henan Province and the leading unit of the medical and health system in Xinyang. How to build a powerful specialty of critical care medicine to provide a guarantee basis for all disciplines of the hospital and critically ill patients in the city? This needs the considerations of hospital managers. Only through keeping a clear mind, taking the protection of the health of the whole city as the first priority, learning advanced concepts and management experiences continuously, and taking responsibility bravely, we can keep up with the pace of the development of critical care medicine in the whole province and even in the whole country.
China
;
Cities
;
Critical Care/organization & administration*
;
Humans
;
Tertiary Care Centers
3.Probe into construction mode of wound care center.
Yue-Hong SHEN ; Chun-Mao HAN ; Guo-Xian CHEN ; Hang HU
Chinese Journal of Burns 2011;27(1):45-48
Relevant data including diagnosis and treatment model, operation situation, etc. are analyzed in our wound care center and compared with abroad based-on literature retrieval, to find out a suitable way for setting up wound care centers in our country. Wound care center with mode of multidisciplinary cooperation that is "specialist-oriented" was established in our hospital, mirroring the experience of foreign wound care centers. The investigation showed the demands of patients could be met, their psychological and economic pressures as well as social burden might be greatly relieved in our center. For an example, we achieved our purpose readily by setting up a clinical pathway of diabetic foot according to the features of our hospital. The model of multidisciplinary cooperation, with minor adjustments, may be applicable for wound care centers at home and abroad. Our wound care center will establish better system of diagnosis and treatment to conform to the situation in our country.
Burn Units
;
organization & administration
;
Critical Pathways
;
Humans
;
Patient Care Team
;
Surgicenters
;
organization & administration
;
Wound Healing
4.Practical Considerations for Converting Operating Rooms and Post-anaesthesia Care Units into Intensive Care Units in the COVID-19 Pandemic - Experience from a Large Singapore Tertiary Hospital.
Zihui TAN ; Priscilla Hui Yi PHOON ; Claudia Jong-Chie TIEN ; Johari KATIJO ; Shin Yi NG ; Meng Huat GOH
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2020;49(12):1009-1012
COVID-19 has spread globally, infecting and killing millions of people worldwide. The use of operating rooms (ORs) and the post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) for intensive care is part of surge response planning. We aim to describe and discuss some of the practical considerations involved in a large tertiary hospital in Singapore. Firstly, considerations for setting up a level III intensive care unit (ICU) include that of space, staff, supplies and standards. Secondly, oxygen supply of the entire hospital is a major determinant of the number of ventilators it can support, including those on non-invasive forms of oxygen therapy. Thirdly, air flows due to positive pressure systems within the OR complex need to be addressed. In addition, due to the worldwide shortage of ICU ventilators, the US Food and Drug Administration has granted temporary approval for the use of anaesthesia gas machines for patients requiring mechanical ventilation. Lastly, planning of logistics and staff deployment needs to be carefully considered during a crisis. Although OR and PACU are not designed for long-term care of critically ill patients, they may be adapted for ICU use with careful planning in the current pandemic.
COVID-19/therapy*
;
Critical Care/organization & administration*
;
Critical Illness
;
Health Care Rationing/organization & administration*
;
Health Resources/organization & administration*
;
Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration*
;
Humans
;
Intensive Care Units/organization & administration*
;
Operating Rooms/organization & administration*
;
Pandemics
;
Respiration, Artificial
;
Singapore/epidemiology*
;
Tertiary Care Centers/organization & administration*
5.Early recognition of deteriorating patient program in department of cardiac surgery.
Chunxiang QIN ; Ping MAO ; Peng XIAO ; Sainan ZENG ; Jianfei XIE ; Siqing DING
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2014;39(3):307-312
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the application and the effect of early recognition of deteriorating patient program in department of cardiac surgery.
METHODS:
We used the early recognition of deteriorating patient program in the cardiac surgery groups, including cardiac surgeons, nurses in ward, ICU and operation rooms of the cardiac surgery department, and compared the satisfaction of nurses and doctors, handover time, handover score of critical patients, and rate of unplanned ICU admission before and after the intervention.
RESULTS:
After using the early recognition of deteriorating patient program, the satisfaction of doctors and nurses was increased, the handover time was lowered 0.56 min/time (t=2.22, P<0.05), the handover score of critical patients enhanced by 19.59 points (t=30.57, P<0.001), the rate of unplanned ICU readmission after the operation reduced by 4.8% (χ2=4.14, P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
Early recognition of deteriorating patient program can improve the safety of cardiac patients, enhance the self-confidence of nurses and work efficiency.
Cardiology Service, Hospital
;
organization & administration
;
Critical Illness
;
Humans
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
;
Patient Handoff
;
Surgery Department, Hospital
;
organization & administration
6.Palliative Care in a COVID-19 Intensive Care Unit (ICU): Challenges and Recommendations for Palliative Care Teams in a Pandemic ICU.
Choo Hwee POI ; Mervyn Yh KOH ; Han Yee NEO ; Allyn Ym HUM
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2020;49(7):517-522
Aged, 80 and over
;
Betacoronavirus
;
Coronavirus Infections
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
;
transmission
;
Critical Care
;
organization & administration
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Palliative Care
;
organization & administration
;
Pandemics
;
Pneumonia, Viral
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
;
transmission
;
Terminal Care
;
organization & administration
7.Construction of Research-Oriented State Key Clinical Department by Highlighting the Characteris- tics and Advantages of Chinese Medicine.
Shi-yu MA ; Li-heng GUO ; Yun HAN ; Jian LI ; Min-zhou ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine 2016;36(4):389-391
As the largest research-oriented specialty department in national traditional Chinese medicine hospitals, the Department of Critical Care Medicine in Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine insists on the development mode combined with clinical medicine and scientific research. By taking clinical and basic researches for integrative medicine preventing and treating acute myocardial in-farction and sepsis as a breakthrough, authors explored key problems of Chinese medicine in improving the prognosis related diseases and patients' quality of life. In recent 3 years our department has successively become the principal unit of the national key specialties cooperative group of critical care medicine (awarded by State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine), the key clinical specialties (awarded by National Health and Family Planning Commission), and Guangzhou key laboratory construction unit, and achieved overall lap in clinical medical treatment, personnel training, scientific research, and social service.
Biomedical Research
;
China
;
Clinical Medicine
;
Critical Care
;
Hospital Departments
;
organization & administration
;
Humans
;
Integrative Medicine
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Quality of Life
8.The WHO near miss criteria are appropriate for admission of critically ill pregnant women to intensive care units in China.
Yong-Qing WANG ; Qing-Gang GE ; Jing WANG ; Ji-Hong NIU ; Chao HUANG ; Yang-Yu ZHAO
Chinese Medical Journal 2013;126(5):895-898
BACKGROUNDEvaluation of the severity of the pregnant women with suitable admission to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is very important for obstetricians. By now there are no criteria for critically ill obstetric patients admitted to the ICU. In this article, we investigated the admission criteria of critically ill patients admitted to the ICU in order to provide a referral basis of reasonable use of the ICU.
METHODSA retrospective analysis of critically ill pregnant women admitted to the ICU in Perking University Third Hospital in China in the last 6 years (from January 2006 to December 2011) was performed, using acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II (APACHE-II), Marshall and WHO near miss criteria to assess the severity of illness of patients.
RESULTSThere were 101 critically ill pregnant patients admitted to the ICU. Among them, 25.7% women were complicated with internal or surgical diseases, and 23.8% women were patients of postpartum hemorrhage and 23.8% women were patients of pregnancy-induced hypertension. Sixty-nine cases (68.3%) were administrated with adjunct respiration with a respirator. Sixteen cases (15.8%) required 1-2 types of vasoactive drugs. Fifty-five cases (54.5%) required a hemodynamic monitoring. Seventy-three cases (72.3%) had multiple organ dysfunctions (MODS). The average duration in ICU was (7.5 ± 3.0) days. A total of 12.9%, 23.8% and 74.3% of women were diagnosed as critically ill according to the APACHE-II, Marshall and WHO near miss criteria, respectively. The rate was significantly different according to the three criteria (P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONSThe WHO near miss criteria can correctly reflect the severity of illness of pregnant women, and the WHO near miss criteria are appropriate for admission of critically ill pregnant women to ICU in China.
APACHE ; China ; Critical Illness ; Female ; Humans ; Intensive Care Units ; Pregnancy ; Retrospective Studies ; Severity of Illness Index ; World Health Organization
9.Influenza Associated Pneumonia.
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2011;70(4):285-292
After an outbreak of H1N1 influenza A virus infection in Mexico in late March 2009, the World Health Organization raised its pandemic alert level to phase 6, and to the highest level in June 2009. The pandemic H1N1/A influenza was caused by an H1N1 influenza A virus that represents a quadruple reassortment of two swine strains, one human strain, and one avian strain of influenza. After the first case report of H1N1/A infection in early May 2009, South Korea was overwhelmed by this new kind of influenza H1N1/A pandemic, which resulted in a total of 700,000 formally reported cases and 252 deaths. In this article, clinical characteristics of victims of H1N1/A influenza infection, especially those who developed pneumonia and those who were cared for in the intensive care unit, are described. In addition, guidelines for the treatment of H1N1/A influenza virus infection victims in the ICU, which was suggested by the Korean Society of Critical Care Medicine, are introduced.
Critical Care
;
Humans
;
Influenza A virus
;
Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype
;
Influenza, Human
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Mexico
;
Orthomyxoviridae
;
Pandemics
;
Pneumonia
;
Republic of Korea
;
Sprains and Strains
;
Swine
;
World Health Organization
10.Initial Unmeasured Anions on Emergency Department in Critically ill Patients: Can they Predict the Morbidity?.
Tae Yong SHIN ; Young Rock HA ; Young ik KIM ; Chan Yeong GO ; Sung Jun AN ; Dong Un KIM ; Sung Sil LEE ; Duk Hyen PAK ; Hyen Young CHO
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2006;17(5):454-462
PURPOSE: To determine whether initial corrected anion gap (C(o)AG), base excess caused by unmeasured anions (BEua), and strong ion gap (SIG) can predict the morbidity of critically ill patients admitted to emergency department (ED). METHODS: 138 patients who visited the critical section of the ED and were admitted to intensive care unit (ICU) were enrolled. We calculated the C(o)AG, BEua, and SIG from the initial blood samples of the patients and initial logistic organ dysfunction score (LODS) also. Then we measured the LODS at the last day of ICU stay again. Comparing with the initial LODS, we divided the patients into two groups based on the changes of the values: favorable group and poor group. RESULTS: There was a significant difference in the mean AGcorr (p=0.007), BEua (p=0.008), SIG (p=0.037) between favorable and poor group. The area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curves for morbidity prediction were relatively small: 0.66 (95% CI, 0.56-0.77) for C(o)AG, 0.65 (95% CI, 0.54-0.76) for BEua, and 0.59 (95% CI, 0.49-0.70) for SIG. CONCLUSION: We found the initial unmeasured anions at the ED of the patients who eventually showed improved LODS during ICU period are significantly different to those of the other patients. But they failed to show enough capability of discriminating the morbidities between two groups.
Acid-Base Equilibrium
;
Anions*
;
Critical Illness*
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Humans
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Organ Dysfunction Scores
;
Organization and Administration
;
ROC Curve