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1.
Acute Med ; 22(1): 12-23, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37039052

RESUMO

The Society for Acute Medicine (SAM) and Intensive Care Society (ICS) have produced joint guidance on the standards of care and infrastructure required to deliver enhanced care within Acute Medicine. The cohort of patients this relates to are in the most part already being looked after on the AMU, but co-location and providing enhanced monitoring and nursing input will ensure safe, high-quality care can be delivered to them. We strongly support the development of enhanced care units, whilst clearly acknowledging that they are not a replacement for critical care where that is indicated. Enhanced care and critical care complement each other and will help foster the close working between the two specialties that modern acute care requires. This guidance draws on expertise and existing relevant guidance from the two societies, alongside that from the Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine (FICM), British Thoracic Society (BTS), National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and NHS England / Improvement (NHSE/I). We recognise this is an area with limited evidence and so will aim to review it regularly as the knowledge and experience in this area increases.


Assuntos
Medicina , Medicina Estatal , Humanos , Inglaterra
2.
Future Healthc J ; 7(3): 214-217, 2020 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33094231

RESUMO

The Intensive Care Society (ICS) has recently published guidance on the transfer of critically ill adults. Since 2007, the North West London Critical Care Network has documented and audited patient transfers undertaken across 13 hospitals, and trained staff in transferring critically ill or injured patients. In 2015/16 the network introduced intra-hospital transfer documentation and applied the same transfer training and audit methodology for critically ill patients being moved within hospitals. While increasing data capture and with a targeted training strategy adapted from transfer experience, the network has seen a reduction in number and severity of incidents in the region. In contrast to this experience, no formalised processes exists to support the inter-hospital or intra-hospital transfer of patients from enhanced care areas or wards not embedded within critical care. Often very little data is collected from these areas, but we suspect transfer risks are higher in these cases as a consequence of the deficit of structured transfers. In collaboration with members of the critical care network, we have developed a basic training module along with the use of a transfer form which has been well received and had a positive impact in terms of incidents reported.

3.
Br J Hosp Med (Lond) ; 76(9): C130-4, 2015 Sep 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26352724
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