scholarly journals Costs of the COPD. Differences between intensive care unit and respiratory intermediate care unit

2005 ◽  
Vol 99 (7) ◽  
pp. 894-900 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Bertolini ◽  
Marco Confalonieri ◽  
Carlotta Rossi ◽  
Giancarlo Rossi ◽  
Bruno Simini ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Enrico Buonamico ◽  
Vitaliano Nicola Quaranta ◽  
Esterina Boniello ◽  
Michela Dimitri ◽  
Valentina Di Lecce ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S1) ◽  
pp. s167-s167
Author(s):  
J. Hu ◽  
J. Xu ◽  
J. Botler ◽  
S. Haydar

A pilot admission leadership physician (ALP) program was experimented within a 693-bed, tertiary medical center with a 60-bed emergency department. This trial was intended to investigate whether having a physician triage potential patients would shorten patients' length-of-stay in the emergency department. After a emergency physician evaluated patients, ALP triaged them. The ALP ordered the appropriate bed for the patients if they qualified for the inpatient criteria, choosing among medical, medical telemetry, cardiac telemetry, intermediate care, or intensive care bed. The mean patient door-to-bed order time (time between patients reaching the emergency department to time to bed ordered by ALP) is 330.7 minutes (n = 234, SD = 151.68, 95% CI = 310.21–351.28) with ALP involvement. Compared with the mean door-to-bed order time of 337.8 minutes (n = 827, SD = 149.71, 95%CI = 326.98–348.57) without ALP, ALP shortened the waiting time by 7.09 minutes. During the same period, the door-to-physician time was 41.38 minutes (SD = 38.87 95%CI = 36.38–46.39), compared with 39.52 minutes (SD = 40.32, 95%CI = 36.77–42.27) before ALP. The time for patients waiting in the emergency department for other services such as surgery, psychiatry, and pediatrics also have decreased accordingly. Incorrect medical admissions such as scrambling to get the patient to the intensive care unit right after seeing patients has decreased (data not provided). Identifying physicians as physicians in the emergency department who triage potential admissions also has improved efficiencies within the hospital medicine group and bonding with ER physicians.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 397-400
Author(s):  
Joao Gabriel Rosa Ramos ◽  
Gabriel Machado Naus dos Santos ◽  
Marina Chetto Coutinho Bispo ◽  
Renata Cristina de Almeida Matos ◽  
Gil Mario Lopes Santos de Carvalho ◽  
...  

This study evaluated unplanned transfers from the intermediate care unit (IMCU) to the intensive care unit (ICU) among urgent admissions. This retrospective, observational study was conducted in 2 ICUs and 1 IMCU. Three patterns of urgent admission were assessed: admissions to the ICU only, admissions to the IMCU only, and admissions to the IMCU with subsequent transfer to the ICU. Of 5296 admissions analyzed, 1396 patients (26.4%) were initially admitted to the IMCU. Of these, 172 (12.3%) were transferred from the IMCU to the ICU. Mortality was higher in patients transferred from the IMCU to the ICU than in the 3900 ICU-only patients (odds ratio, 3.22; 95% CI, 1.52-6.80). Most transfers from the IMCU to the ICU (135; 78.5%) were due to deterioration of the condition for which the patient was admitted. Patient transfers from the IMCU to the ICU were common, were associated with increased hospital mortality, and were mostly due to deterioration in the condition that was the reason for admission.


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