scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The critical care cascade: a systems approach.

Rishi Ghosh, +1 more
- 01 Aug 2009 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 4, pp 279-283
TLDR
The basis and rationale for the ‘critical care cascade’ concept, which contends that the optimal management of critically ill patients should be a continuum of care through the healthcare system, are discussed.
Abstract
Purpose of review To emphasize the evolving body of evidence that supports the need for a more seamless and interconnected continuum of patient care for a growing compendium of critical care conditions, starting in the prehospital and emergency department (ED) phases of management and continuing through ICU and rehabilitation services. Recent findings The care of critically ill and injured patients has become increasingly complex. It now has been demonstrated that, for a number of such critical care conditions, optimal management not only relies heavily on the talents of highly coordinated, multidisciplinary teams, but it also may require shared responsibilities across a continuum of longitudinal care involving numerous specialties and departments. This continuum usually needs to begin in the prehospital and ED settings with management extending through specialized in-hospital diagnostic and interventional suites to traditional ICU and rehabilitation programs. In recent years, examples of these conditions have included the development of systems of care for trauma, cardiac arrest, myocardial infarction, stroke, sepsis syndromes, toxicology and other critical illnesses. Although the widespread implementation of such multidisciplinary, multispecialty critical care cascades of care has been achieved most commonly in trauma care, current healthcare delivery systems generally tend to employ compartmentalized organization for the majority of other critical care patients. Accordingly, optimal systematic care often breaks down in the management of these complex patients due to barriers such as lack of interoperable communication between teams, disjointed transfers between services, unnecessary time-consuming, re-evaluations and transitional pauses in time-dependent circumstances, deficiencies in cross-disciplinary education and quality assurance loops, and significant variability in patient care practices. Such barriers can lead to adverse outcomes in this fragile patient population. Summary This article discusses the basis and rationale for the 'critical care cascade' concept, which contends that the optimal management of critically ill patients should be a continuum of care through the healthcare system. In the critical care cascade, each patient is enrolled on a 'pathway' of management based on their working diagnosis and each and every healthcare provider engaged along that continuum acts as part of a interconnected coordinated team that ensures a specific endpoint for these patients in a bundled manner that seamlessly extends from the prehospital and ED phases to the ICU and rehabilitation services.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the scope of post-intensive care syndrome therapy and care: engagement of non-critical care providers and survivors in a second stakeholders meeting.

TL;DR: Raising awareness of post–intensive care syndrome for the public and both critical care and non–critical care clinicians will inform a more coordinated approach to treatment and support during recovery after critical illness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing Critical Care Admissions From U.S. Emergency Departments, 2001–2009*

TL;DR: The amount ofcritical care provided in U.S. EDs has increased substantially over the past decade, driven by increasing numbers of critical care ED visits and lengthening ED length of stay.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socioeconomic status, functional recovery, and long-term mortality among patients surviving acute myocardial infarction.

TL;DR: Functional recovery may play an important role in explaining SES-mortality gradients following AMI, and the effects of functional recovery on S ES-m mortality associations were not explained by access inequities to physician specialists or cardiac rehabilitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Endotheliopathy of Trauma is an on-Scene Phenomenon, and is Associated with Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome: A Prospective Observational Study

TL;DR: EoT was present at the scene of injury and prehospital interventions aimed at endothelial restoration may represent a clinically meaningful target for prehospital resuscitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A team‐based approach to patients in cardiogenic shock

TL;DR: A multidisciplinary cardiogenic shock team is recommended to guide the rapid and efficient use of these available treatments, making time‐dependent decision‐making more challenging.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and implementation of the Ontario Stroke System: the use of evidence

TL;DR: This study provides guidance to support the development and implementation of evidence-based models of integrated service delivery across the continuum of care in the Ontario Stroke System.
Journal Article

The golden hour and the dull reality. Analysis of traumatic brain injury management in pre-hospital and emergency care.

TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis of ambulance service records of 144 patients with severe traumatic brain injury that occurred in 2002-2004, who were in grave clinical status was carried out, and the relationship between patient's clinical status at admission and discharge and the duration of pre-hospital and hospital work-up were also analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prehospital and Emergency Department Care to Preserve Neurologic Function During and Following Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

TL;DR: The NIH-sponsored Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium represents the largest governmentally sponsored effort of its kind that that will test the value of promising pharmacologic and device interventions on improving survival and neurologic outcome in OHCA patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emergency physicians in critical care: a consultant's experience.

T Brown
TL;DR: A personal experience of such a job is described, looking at the advantages and disadvantages of training in critical care medicine for emergency medicine trainees.
Journal ArticleDOI

Le pôle d'activité, une opportunité pour formaliser des processus de soins transversaux à l'hôpital public

TL;DR: Public hospitals are free to reorganize their departments into a different and more rational structure but this reorganization requires that the new departments reach a critical size and bring together units according to three complementary approaches: medical, administrative, and cultural.
Related Papers (5)