Intensive care unit explained

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.

An intensive care unit (ICU) was defined by the task force of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine as "an organized system for the provision of care to critically ill patients that provides intensive and specialized medical and nursing care, an enhanced capacity for monitoring, and multiple modalities of physiologic organ support to sustain life during a period of life-threatening organ system insufficiency."[1]

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.[2]

History

See 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. Florence provided several simple but powerful interventions: a clean environment, medical equipment, clean water, and fruits.[3] With this work, the mortality rate decreased from 60% to 42% and then to 2.2%[4] [5]

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.[6] [7]

The first application of this idea in the United States was in 1951 by Dwight Harken. Harken's concept of intensive care has been adopted worldwide and has improved the chance of survival for patients. He opened the first intensive care unit in 1951. In the 1960s, he developed the first device to help the heart pump. He also implanted artificial aortic and mitral valves. He continued to pioneer in surgical procedures for operating on the heart. He established and worked in several organizations related to the heart.

In 1955, William Mosenthal, a surgeon at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center also opened an early intensive care unit.[8] 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.[9]

Types

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

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.

Burn recovery bed

See main article: Burn recovery bed.

Quality of care

The available data suggests a relation between ICU volume and quality of care for mechanically ventilated patients.[10] 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 multiple vasoactive medications to keep their blood pressure high enough to perfuse tissue. The patient may require multiple machines; Examples: continuous dialysis CRRT, a intra-aortic balloon pump, ECMO.

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.[11] Nurses are the largest group of healthcare professionals working in ICUs. There are findings which have demonstrated that nursing leadership styles have impact on ICU quality measures [12] particularly structural and outcomes measures.

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.[13]

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.[14]

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

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 electronic 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.[15] [16] [17] [18]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Marshall, John C., et al. "What is an intensive care unit? A report of the task force of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine." Journal of critical care 37 (2017): 270-276.
  2. Web site: What is an ICU . wiseGEEK . Conjecture Corporation . Sparks, Nevada . Smith . S. E. . Bronwyn Harris . 2013-03-24 . 2012-06-15.
  3. Nightingale F. Florence Nightingale. Cassandra: an essay. 1979. Am J Public Health. 2010;100(9):1586–
  4. Velioglu, P. "Concepts and theories in nursing." Alas Ofset, Istanbul (1999): 37-48.
  5. Karimi, Hosein, and Negin Masoudi Alavi. "Florence Nightingale: The mother of nursing." Nursing and midwifery studies 4.2 (2015).
  6. . English translation of introduction.
  7. Web site: The Danish anaesthesiologist was a pioneer of long-term ventilation on the upper airways. . L. . Reisner-Sénélar . 2009.
  8. Grossman . D.C. . Vital Signs: Remembering Dr. William Mosenthal: A simple idea from a special surgeon . Dartmouth Medicine . 28 . 3 . Spring 2004 . 2007-04-10.
  9. Web site: 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.
  10. Kahn . J.M. . Goss . C.H. . Heagerty . P.J. . Kramer . A.A. . O'Brien . C.R. . Rubenfeld . G.D. . 4 . Hospital volume and the outcomes of mechanical ventilation . . 355 . 1 . 41–50 . 2006-07-06 . 16822995 . 10.1056/NEJMsa053993. free .
  11. Ely. EW. etal. Delirium in mechanically ventilated patients: validity and reliability of the confusion assessment method for the intensive care unit (CAM-ICU).. JAMA. 2001-12-05. 286. 21. 2703–10. 11730446. 10.1001/jama.286.21.2703. free. 10818/12438. free.
  12. Kiwanuka . Frank . Nanyonga . Rose Clarke . Sak-Dankosky . Natalia . Muwanguzi . Patience A. . Kvist . Tarja . Nursing leadership styles and their impact on intensive care unit quality measures: An integrative review . Journal of Nursing Management . 2021 . en . 29 . 2 . 133–142 . 10.1111/jonm.13151 . 0966-0429. free . 32881169 .
  13. Organisation of intensive care. 1115845. 1999. 318. 7196. 10346777. Bennett. D.. Bion. J.. 1468–70. BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.). 10.1136/bmj.318.7196.1468.
  14. Barrett ML, Smith MW, Elizhauser A, Honigman LS, Pines JM . Utilization of Intensive Care Services, 2011 . HCUP Statistical Brief . 185 . Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality . Rockville, MD . December 2014 . 25654157 .
  15. Web site: Hospitals Monitor ICU Patients Virtually, From Many Miles Away . WFAE . 2013-05-06 . 2017-03-16.
  16. Web site: Tele-ICU: Efficacy and Cost-Effectiveness of Remotely Managing Critical Care | Perspectives . Perspectives.ahima.org . 2014-06-20 . 2017-03-16 . 2017-02-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170228104332/http://perspectives.ahima.org/tele-icu-efficacy-and-cost-effectiveness-of-remotely-managing-critical-care/#.Vzo3vJ6j7eQ . dead .
  17. Web site: Emerging Best Practices for Tele-ICU Care . CHCF.org . 2017-03-16.
  18. A Second Set of Eyes: An Introduction to Tele-ICU. Susan F.. Goran. 1 August 2010. Crit Care Nurse. 30. 4. 46–55. 10.4037/ccn2010283. 20675821. 43905861 .