• Statins Reduce Deaths From Infection and Respiratory Illness,

    Data Eight Years on From Trial Suggests The death rate among patients prescribed a statin in a major trial that ended in 2003 is still lower than those given a placebo, even though most participants in both groups have been taking statins ever since. ASCOT, the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial, was stopped early because the statin was...

    READ MORE
  • Improving Long-Term Recovery after Critical Illness in the UK

    Background Critical Illness  Critical illness is any form of illness that represents an immediate threat to life.The major purpose of Intensive Care Units (ICUs) is to treat patients with potentially reversible forms of critical illness. Until recently, the major focus in ICU research has been on survival, usually short-term survival, and...

    READ MORE
  • Overview of Irish Healthcare System

    Ireland is one of a small number of countries where the delivery of Health and  Social care services comes under the auspices of one government department.  The range of services delivered ranges from neurosurgery at one end of the spectrum to child and family welfare services on the other end. Services are  usually categorised by acute care,...

    READ MORE
  • Intensive Care Medicine in Ireland

    Still in the throes of economic turmoil and famous for political disputes, there are many reasons why one might wonder how Ireland's Intensive care Medicine (ICM) system could be accurately summarised while the country remains in such a state of flux. The division of this island into Northern Ireland and the Republic has never prevented close cooperation...

    READ MORE
  • Implementing a Diary Programme in Your ICU

    Patients recovering from serious illness have been shown to be at risk for developing Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Studies show that around 1 in 10 patients with an ICU stay of 48 hours or more develop PTSD (Jones et al. 2007).   Since the 1980s, it has been known that patients don’t tend to remember much from their time in ICU and...

    READ MORE
  • A Change Management Perspective on a Novel Meta-Analysis:

    Early Enteral Nutrition in Trauma Patients The first step in any practice change initiative involves an 'appraisal' of the research evidence to understand its inherent potential to change practice. As an example, a novel meta-analysis of early enteral nutrition in trauma is assessed. Introduction Up to 30% of all hospitalised...

    READ MORE
  • Avoiding Disasters

    A Tool for Estimating the Needs of Healthcare Resorces at Sporting and Other Public Events Co-authors Amir Khorram-Manesh, MD, PhD Annika H.E. Hedelin, RN Per Örtenwall, MD, PhD Sporting events have the potential to turn into major incidents. Thus, as part of the planning for such events, there should be an estimation of the needs for medical...

    READ MORE
  • We Need to Connect

    For this "After ICU" edition of ICU Management, Managing Editor Sherry Scharff sat down with Jean-Daniel Chiche to discuss a range of engaging topics including the allure of intensive care medicine as a specialty, the need to push away from the "hero" culture and the importance of being human. What Brought You to the Field of Intensive Care?...

    READ MORE
  • After ICU

    Introduction Intensive care medicine is quite a recent medical discipline born around 1950. At the beginning, the medical world held an illusion that new highly sophisticated techniques would allow for the recovery of every single patient. A half century later, the discipline has grown up and there is a realisation that while many more lives...

    READ MORE
  • Intensive Care Medicine in Spain

    In Spain, the first units for critically ill patients, which appeared during the 1970s, were managed by anaesthetists, internists and, to a lesser extent, by cardiologists and pneumologists. The need for continuous and specific care of these critically ill patients represented the basis and origin of the specialty known as Intensive Care Medicine....

    READ MORE
Subscribe To The ICU Management Channel