The Intensivist تحميل

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Vilma Steiert

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Jul 12, 2024, 1:34:10 AM7/12/24
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There are now chapters up on the core critical care topics. Nearly all chapters have either been written or updated in 2020-2021, so it's pretty fresh. Ongoing updates will continue to push this date forwards.

the intensivist تحميل


تنزيل ملف مضغوط https://urllio.com/2z01WJ



Special thanks to Richard Choi (@rkchoi), neurointensivist extraordinaire, who has been reviewing the neurology chapters to provide additional perspective. We're also excited about the flourishing world of NeuroICU FOAMed which will also help guide the IBCC (e.g., posts by Neha Dangayach and Casey Albin).

The most basic method is to just add the IBCC table of contents to your browser favorites list, or pin the link to your home screen. I did that for a while, but it got frustrating if I wanted to toggle back and forth between the IBCC and another webpage. I found the following approach to work much better.

Please consider becoming a member of EMCrit, if you're not already. This gives you access to all of Scott Weingart's amazing materials. Supporting EMCrit also keeps our internet servers spinning, which allows PulmCrit & IBCC to be disseminated freely (Adam and I work for free, because we're insane).

You have created an amazing resource, thank you for that. Many of us work in a combined medical/surgical ICU, have you considered teaming up with people working in SICU and adding more surgical ICU topics?

Just want to say many thanks for your hard work and keeping us intensivist up to date. IBCC is main source I go to when I have clinical questions or dilemmas. Lectures are structured in the way that you can easily find what you need.
Please keep strong work.

I bet if you did create an App you could charge for that and people would pay for the convenience, having seen how great the material is on the website. That way anyone can access, but they can choose to pay (for the App). Still ethical and gets you guys some well deserved moola, even if it to help run the resources here.

As a resident in training the IBCC has been an invaluable resource. I like that the IBCC addresses implementation and practical considerations for management. I find that you cover important nuance that can others gloss over.

I really love this resource. I am probably the minority but having an actual app, PDF, or something that could be made available offline would be a MASSIVE help. I love having the RCM downloaded to me my phone and always available. Working in Medevac in Alaska a 2-3 hour transport with a critical patient is pretty routine for us. Being able to access this information offline would be incredible. Any suggestions on that front?

The critical care unit is one of the most complex environments in the hospital, with huge amounts of data being generated from an array of high-tech equipment keeping acutely ill patients alive. The wide choice of drugs for each condition, combined with an array of other interventions to maintain breathing, circulation, sedation levels and nutritional status, mean that intensivists need a unique set of skills from several different areas of medicine. This can be a daunting environment for the trainee intensivist or anaesthetist.The aim of this collection of pocketbooks is to provide trainees and nurses in the ICU with practical, didactic advice on every aspect ICU medicine. Each title will be of 125-250 pages, follow a similar structure, be well illustrated where appropriate and provide practical treatment advice, with sections dedicated to the tricky clinical problems faced in the ICU.

To save content items to your account,please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.Find out more about saving content to .

This book, written by internationally renowned experts, is a comprehensive text covering all aspects and recommendations regarding the use of POCUS for critically ill neonates and children. Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) for the Neonatal and Pediatric Intensivist is structured to address and expand upon recently published international evidence-based POCUS guidelines endorsed by the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care (ESPNIC).

Dr Yogen Singh is a Professor of Pediatrics at Loma Linda University School of Medicine and Adjunct Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at Stanford University. He is an attending neonatal intensivist at Loma Linda University Children's Hospital. Dr Singh is the Chair of the ESPNIC Cardiovascular Hemodynamics Section and POCUS Working Group, and serves as the Director of the Targeted Neonatal Echocardiography, neonatal POCUS and Hemodynamics at Loma Linda University Hospital. Dr Singh has been a Consultant Neonatologist and Pediatrician with Expertise in Cardiology at Cambridge University Hospitals.

Currently, the critical care units at UTMB include an 16-bed Surgical Intensive Care Unit, including Cardiovascular, Trauma, Transplant, and others, a Medical ICU, a dedicated Neuro ICU, and an adult Burn ICU. Our anesthesiology program also participates with Shriners Hospital for Children ICU.

The Critical Care Division provides intensivist coverage for 16 postoperative Surgical ICU beds in the newly constructed Jeannie Sealy hospital, opened April 2016. The unit is "semi-closed, with close collaboration with all the surgical services. Strong emphasis is placed on a multidisciplinary approach to critical care, involving colleagues from other medical specialties as well as from the nursing staff, pharmacists, respiratory therapists, physical therapists, nutritionists, medical social workers, as well as palliative and ethics services.

The Critical Care Division is responsible for the training of anesthesiology CCM Fellows, residents in anesthesiology, surgery, OB and medicine, as well as medical students. Anesthesia residents spend 4-6 months in critical care during their PGY-1 through PGY-4, with progressive responsibilities. The teaching experience embraces all aspects of critical care, placement and management of invasive hemodynamic monitors, training in point of care ultrasound to include acquisition of heart, lung, abdomen, bladder and vascular images, ventilator management, renal replacement therapy, use of drug infusion techniques, nutritional support, infectious disease control and medical ethics.

ICU Teaching conferences: ICU Teaching block in Anesthesiology residency. TRISAT regional webinar conferences every Tuesday. Resident/Fellow teaching conference on Fridays. Noon ICU lectures. ICU rounds educational topics. Critical Care Interdisciplinary Journal Club.

"The Medical Intensive Care Unit at Mobile Infirmary is delighted to receive national recognition for its exceptional care to our patients and their families," stated Susan Boudreau, FACHE, President of Mobile Infirmary. "This award is proof of our unyielding dedication to providing the highest quality of care."

The Mobile Infirmary critical care program diagnoses and treats all types of disorders and diseases in their most severe form. The Medical ICU, Surgical ICU, and Neuro ICU are staffed with highly specialized critical care physician intensivists who provide round-the-clock care to our critically ill patients.

Recipients of the Gold-level award have shown outstanding performance in unit management and patient outcomes that surpass national benchmarks, as per the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). The Beacon Award for Excellence was established in 2003 to provide a framework for delivering exceptional care, resulting in better outcomes and higher patient satisfaction. Nursing units in North America that provide care to patients after their hospital admission are eligible for this award.

From small rural hospitals to large academic medical centers, there is a clear need for health systems to integrate tools that will help them optimize resources and take care of as much of the patient population as possible.

The Philips eICU program is a transformational critical care tele-ICU program that combines A/V technology, predictive analytics, data visualization and advanced reporting capabilities, delivered by Philips experts with more than 15 years of proven success. Over the past decade and a half, more than 4.25 million1 patient stays have been monitored by Philips eICU program.

A centralized tele-ICU not only makes care by intensivists more accessible across hospital systems, it also drives a higher level of care, leading to improved outcomes and lower cost. Data is captured in real-time to inform intensivists who can rapidly intervene. This data is captured and analyzed over time, giving facilities the potential to identify best practices.

Philips IntelliBridge Enterprise is the integration engine that syncs with eCareManager to acquire patient data from bedside devices and the EMR, populating eCareManager with the data to drive the clinical programs.

Using eSearch to access the large amount of complex data in eCareManager requires guidance on how to find, interpret and use the data most effectively. Our total Data Access Kit provides a detailed map and instruction kit to make it simple.

In collaboration with MIT, Philips has developed the eICU Research Institute (eRI) as a platform to advance the knowledge of critical care using the vast database repository generated by our eICU programs. This data is donated by member institutions that wish to further research in the intensive care field.

One size never fits all. We partner with you to understand and assess your needs and guide your organization through the transformation to a centralized critical care model that meets your unique requirements. Through implementation, clinical support, staff engagement, education and training, our clinical and technical professionals help provide seamless integration of tele-ICU into your care delivery system.

Arriving at the decision that a tele-ICU will add value and potentially reduce cost is easier than ever, yet the path to implementation can be challenging. In the past, tele-ICU solutions required significant upfront investment. But today, the model is attainable for all hospitals, regardless of size, operational and technical capacity, and intensivist staffing resources.

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