Book ChapterDOI
Telemedizin in der Intensivmedizin
Gernot Marx
- pp 89-103
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Telemedizin implementiert in der IntensivmedizIn zusatzliche arztliche Expertise and Kompetenz, welche bedarfsgerecht, hochverfugbar and kosteneffizient am jeweils notwendigen Ort vorhanden ist.Abstract:
Telemedizin implementiert in der Intensivmedizin zusatzliche arztliche Expertise und Kompetenz, welche bedarfsgerecht, hochverfugbar und kosteneffizient am jeweils notwendigen Ort vorhanden ist. Telemedizin realisiert in der Intensivmedizin ein digitales Gesundheitsnetzwerk als neue digitale Versorgungsform. Telemedizin ermoglicht damit in der Intensivmedizin eine Strukturinnovation und verbessert messbar und flachendeckend die Behandlungs- und Prozessqualitat, sowie die Effizienz der Versorgung relevanter Patientenkollektive.read more
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Book ChapterDOI
Telemedizinische postoperative Versorgung herzchirurgischer Patienten
TL;DR: In this article, a telemedizinisch intensivierte Kontakt von den implantierbaren Linksherzunterstutzungssystemen (LVAD) patients is described.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Epidemiology of sepsis in Germany: results from a national prospective multicenter study
Christoph Engel,Frank M. Brunkhorst,Hans-Georg Bone,Reinhard Richard Brunkhorst,Herwig Gerlach,Stefan Grond,Matthias Gruendling,Guenter Huhle,Ulrich Jaschinski,Stefan John,Konstantin Mayer,Michael Oppert,Derk Olthoff,Michael Quintel,Max Ragaller,Rolf Rossaint,Frank Stüber,Norbert Weiler,Tobias Welte,Holger Bogatsch,Christiane S. Hartog,Markus Loeffler,Konrad Reinhart +22 more
TL;DR: The expected number of newly diagnosed cases with severe sepsis in Germany amounts to 76–110 per 100,000 adult inhabitants and future epidemiological studies should use standardized study methodologies with respect to sepsi definitions, hospital size, and daily and monthly variability.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hospital Volume and the Outcomes of Mechanical Ventilation
Jeremy M. Kahn,Christopher H. Goss,Patrick J. Heagerty,Andrew A. Kramer,Chelsea R O'Brien,Gordon D. Rubenfeld +5 more
TL;DR: An increase in hospital volume was associated with improved survival among patients receiving mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU) and in the hospital and mechanical ventilation of patients in a hospital with a high case volume is associated with reduced mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Efficacy of telemedical interventional management in patients with heart failure (TIM-HF2): a randomised, controlled, parallel-group, unmasked trial
Friedrich Koehler,Kerstin Koehler,Oliver Deckwart,Sandra Prescher,Karl Wegscheider,Bridget-Anne Kirwan,Sebastian Winkler,Eik Vettorazzi,Leonhard Bruch,Michael Oeff,Christian Zugck,Gesine Doerr,Herbert Naegele,Stefan Störk,Christian Butter,Udo Sechtem,Christiane E. Angermann,Guntram Gola,Roland Prondzinsky,Frank Edelmann,Sebastian Spethmann,Sebastian M Schellong,P. Christian Schulze,Johann Bauersachs,Brunhilde Wellge,Christoph Schoebel,Milos Tajsic,Henryk Dreger,Stefan D. Anker,Karl Stangl +29 more
TL;DR: The TIM-HF2 trial suggests that a structured remote patient management intervention, when used in a well defined heart failure population, could reduce the percentage of days lost due to unplanned cardiovascular hospital admissions and all-cause mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Hospital Mortality, Length of Stay, and Preventable Complications Among Critically Ill Patients Before and After Tele-ICU Reengineering of Critical Care Processes
Craig M. Lilly,Shawn Cody,Huifang Zhao,Karen E. Landry,Stephen P. Baker,John K. McIlwaine,M. Willis Chandler,Richard S. Irwin +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the tele-ICU intervention period compared with the pre-intervention period was associated with higher rates of best clinical practice adherence for the prevention of deep vein thrombosis (99% vs 85%, respectively; OR, 15.4 [95% CI, 11.9%12.4] and lower rates of preventable complications (1.6% vs 13%, respectively).
Journal ArticleDOI
Post-intensive Care Syndrome: an Overview.
TL;DR: All critical care survivors should be evaluated for PICS and those having signs and symptoms of it should be managed by a multidisciplinary team which includes critical care physician, neuro-psychiatrist, physiotherapist and respiratory therapist, with the use of pharmacological and non-apharmacological interventions.