Management of intensive care : guidelines for better use of resources
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Management of intensive care : guidelines for better use of resources
(Developments in critical care medicine and anaesthesiology, 16)
Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1990
- : alk. paper
Available at 1 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
  Miyagi
  Akita
  Yamagata
  Fukushima
  Ibaraki
  Tochigi
  Gunma
  Saitama
  Chiba
  Tokyo
  Kanagawa
  Niigata
  Toyama
  Ishikawa
  Fukui
  Yamanashi
  Nagano
  Gifu
  Shizuoka
  Aichi
  Mie
  Shiga
  Kyoto
  Osaka
  Hyogo
  Nara
  Wakayama
  Tottori
  Shimane
  Okayama
  Hiroshima
  Yamaguchi
  Tokushima
  Kagawa
  Ehime
  Kochi
  Fukuoka
  Saga
  Nagasaki
  Kumamoto
  Oita
  Miyazaki
  Kagoshima
  Okinawa
  Korea
  China
  Thailand
  United Kingdom
  Germany
  Switzerland
  France
  Belgium
  Netherlands
  Sweden
  Norway
  United States of America
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
***遡及データをもとにした流用入力である
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Intensive Care Medicine has been continuously growing and expanding, culturally, technically and geographically. Monitoring and instrumentation are continuously improving and more and more hospitals are getting Intensive Care facilities. The costs have proportionally increased over the years, so that ICUs represent today a major cost for health structures. Since the available resources are limited, a real need is emerging to set the limits and indications of Intensive Care. It is understood that the problem not only involves medical considerations, but also ethical and economical aspects of the utmost importance. For the first time in Europe, this book edited by Reis Miranda and his colleagues tackles systematically the many structural aspects of the European Intensive Care. The organisation and financing of health care in the Old Continent is deeply different from the American one, and the results and consequent proposals obtained in the USA cannot simply be transferred to this side of the Atlantic Ocean. Weare extremely pleased to welcome this first European attempt to discuss the Intensive Care problem. It lays no claims to giving definite replies in a continuously developing field, but it will surely become the basis for future discussions and proposals. I am particularly happy that this work has mainly developed within the European Society of Intensive Care, whose final target is to ensure a common standard of therapy in our old Europe, beyond national differences. We warmly congratulate the authors, and I am sure that their work will find wide diffusion and consent.
Table of Contents
I: Introduction.- 1. Intensive Care Medicine.- 1.1 Fundamentals of Intensive Care Medicine.- 1.2 The facilities.- 1.3 The different interpretations of Intensive Care Medicine.- 1.4 ICM to whom?.- 1.5 Ethics.- 2. Guidelines for Intensive Care Medicine.- 2.1 Why guidelines?.- 2.2 The target-groups.- 2.3 The guidelines.- II: The Patients.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Measuring the type of patients.- 2.1 Referral source.- 2.2 The problem of diagnosis.- 3. Measuring the previous health status and the severity of illness.- 3.1 Previous Health Status.- 3.2 Severity Indexes.- 4. Measuring the workload.- 4.1 The TISS system.- 4.2 The Omega system.- 4.3 The PRN system.- 5. Measuring the evolution of severity of illness.- 5.1 The OSF system.- 5.2 The Sickness Scoring (SS).- 6. Stratification of patient related data.- 6.1 Essential data.- 6.2 Important data.- 6.3 Desirable data.- 6.4 Optional data.- References.- Tables.- III: The Facilities.- 1. Introduction.- 2. ICUs in Europe: The great diversity.- 2.1 Size.- 2.2 Utilization pattern.- 2.3 Education and training.- 2.4 Classification of ICUs.- 3. The type and size of Intensive Care facilities.- 3.1 The type of ICUs.- 3.2 The size of ICUs.- 3.3 The location of ICUs.- 4. General standard for ICUs.- 4.1 Space and technical conditions.- 4.2 Attendance protocols and procedure manuals.- 4.3 Ancillary services.- 4.4 Quality assurance.- 5. Staffing.- 6. Comparing facilities.- Addendum I.- Addendum II.- Addendum III.- Addendum IV.- References.- IV: National and Regional Organisation.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Estimating the total number of ICU beds required.- 2.1 Rates of occupancy and availability.- 3. Factors influencing regional planning.- 3.1 Hierarchy of IC facilities.- 4. Levels of care.- 4.1 Determinants of levels of care.- 5. Calculating manpower needs.- 6. Conclusions.- References.- V: Management Control in the ICU.- 1. Planning and control.- 2. The ICU: Expense or responsibility centre?.- 3. Performance criteria.- 4. Incentives and constraints of ICU performance.- 4.1 Patient characteristics.- 4.2 Admissions and discharge decisions.- 4.3 ICU inputs.- 4.4 ICU throughputs.- 4.5 Final ICU outputs.- 5. Conclusions.- References.- VI: Education and Training.- 1. Introduction.- 2. The actual education and training of Intensive Care Medicine.- 2.1 Physicians.- 2.2 Nurses.- 2.3 Other personnel.- 3. General recommendations.- 3.1 Physicians.- 3.2 Nurses.- 3.3 Other personnel.- 4. Conclusions.- Addendum I. Present situation in European countries.- Addendum II. Basic education.- Addendum III. Special education.- Addendum IV. Catalogue of skills for special Intensive Care Medicine training.- Addendum V. General Intensive Care nursing for registered general nurses.- Addendum VI. Special Intensive Care training for nurses in West-Germany.- VII: Evaluation in Intensive Care.- 1. What should or could be evaluated.- 1.1 Technologies and interventions.- 1.2 Organisational studies.- 2. Who should evaluate?.- 2.1 Internal audit.- 2.2 External audit.- 2.3 Concensus conference.- 2.4 Recommendations.- 3 Intensivists should try to adopt common definitions and classifications.- 3.1 Classification of patients in large series.- 3.2 Classification of patients by specific diagnoses.- 3.3 DRGs and evaluation.- 4. Evaluation studies must have a proper scientific design.- 4.1 Study design.- 4.2 Proper control group.- 4.3 Stratification.- 5. The proper judgement criteria must be employed.- 6. Long term evaluation of Intensive Care: Health status and quality of life.- 6.1 Definitions.- 6.2 Proper scale.- 6.3 General characteristics of the scales.- 6.4 Functional status scales.- 6.5 Generic measures of health status.- 6.6 Measurements of perceived quality of life.- 6.7 Recommendations.- 7. Economic evaluation of intensive care utilisation.- 7.1 Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA).- 7.2 Cost-Effectiveness Analysis (CEA).- 7.3 Conclusions and general recommendations.- References.- Table 1. Data for Evaluation of ICM.- Table 2. Components of the Activity of Daily Living.- Table 3. Elements of the Sickness Impact Profile.- Table 4. Components of the Quality of Well Being.- Table 5. Components of the Perceived Quality of Life Index.- Table 6. Costs and Benefits of Intensive Care.- Table 7. Cost Accounting in the ICU.- VIII: Epilogue.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Quantification.- 3. Regionalisation.- 4. Professionalisation.- 5. Levels of responsibility.- 6. Intensive Care Medicine societies.- 7. Concluding comments.- Directory of Intensive Care Organisations.- Subject Index and Abbreviations.- Nigel Turner.
by "Nielsen BookData"