Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What is Critical Care.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What is Critical Care."— Presentation transcript:

1 What is Critical Care

2 Intensive Care Unit:- Specialized area for the sickest patients in the hospital in one place Staffed by a multidisciplinary team Has the equipment & medication required to provide multi-organ support Specialist / tertiary referral centres Proximity to operating theatres, emergency departments & radiology services

3 Iron Lung Unit

4 Levels of Care Level 0 :- patients whose clinical needs are met by general ward care Level 1 :- patients at risk of deterioration on a general ward who require critical care input. Level 2 :- HDU care (patients requiring intensive observations or single organ support) Level 3 :- Intensive care (patients requiring advanced respiratory support alone OR two or more organ support) Level 4 :- Intensive care patients requiring 2 nurses’ input at one time

5 National standards (CC3N)

6 National standards and service specification:

7 ICU Vary in size Physical structure Devices People Patients Staffing

8 1. Physical space: Efficiently sharing of technology and expertise
Require enough room around bed spaces to move safely from all sides of the bed. Need an area for relative and to have private conversations with families. Increasingly ‘without walls’ Marshall et al (2017) Journal of Critical Care (37) p

9 2.Support and monitoring technology
Continuous monitoring (invasive and non- invasive), display should be available to all Documentation of obs to look for trends Respiratory support, CVS support and rneal support are the mainstays of therapy – but each unit will have their own specialism.

10 3. Human resources: Advanced practice qualifications
Medical staff available day and night

11 4. Critical care services provided:
Liaison team Specialist projects like sepsis / EWS / acutely unwell adult teaching Follow up clinics

12 5. Research, education and quality improvement:
Improve patient care and contribute to the ICU ‘body of knowledge’ Quality improvement group across all three adult critical care units.

13 Where do Patients come from??
ED - emergency patients will arrive for all specialities Elective surgery – lists will be prioritised every day by the nurse in charge, and medical staff Wards – an acute deterioration may lead to ICU admission Inter hospital transfer – for specialist care not available in the patients local hospital (also known as tertiary referrals) Length of stay is varied (a lot of patients – 1 night, but can be much longer)

14 Organisation of Care Identification of patients at risk Admission
Ongoing care Discharge Follow up

15 Nurses Role in ICU Ensure patient safety
Delivery of patient centered, holistic nursing care based on patient focused assessment Care of relatives and significant others Professionalism Communication Follow policies/procedures/guidelines

16 References www.ics.org.uk / FICM www.gicu.sgul.ac.uk
BACCN

17 Any Questions ?


Download ppt "What is Critical Care."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google