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Found 118 results
  1. Content Article
    This webinar recording from ICU Steps is a session with trustees about recovery from critical illness and what can be done to help.
  2. Content Article
    Hospital-acquired pneumonia, whether device associated or not, is the number one hospital-acquired infection in the United States and a major threat to the safety of patients. This blog by Patient Safety Movement discusses how engaging nurses in quality improvement around mouth care reduces ventilator acquired pneumonias.
  3. Content Article
    The Imperial Simulation Team, led by Dr Malik, filmed this Immersive Simulation of a SARS-CoV2 patient with COVID-19 disease who had a cardiac arrest. Filmed at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust/Imperial College London.
  4. Content Article
    The COVID-19 pandemic has changed most lives internationally. Households have shifted, balancing financial concerns and anxieties about the health of family and friends with the trials and responsibilities of childcare. During this pandemic it became clear that while many were struggling with the same issues, a series of shared stories could help the wellbeing of frontline NHS staff who might feel isolated and alone. The following voices are not unique to Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, anaesthesia or healthcare in the UK, but they were selected from the department to represent some of many healthcare workers who have taken on new professional roles as well as radically different ways of working and living.
  5. Content Article
    This report, from the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB), provides insight into a current safety risk that was identified on a referral. The referral was about difficulties in identifying clinical deterioration in patients with COVID-19 on general wards. The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) highlighted the issue of rapid deterioration in oxygenation in patients with COVID-19 and how this might relate to the use of early warning scores.
  6. Content Article
    This bedside guide, from the Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors, is intended for the use of all healthcare staff who are looking after adult patients with tracheostomies. The tasks described should not be attempted by those who have not received training or been deemed as competent in tracheostomy care and management. This guide includes posters, checklists and practical resources to aid the safe care of patients with tracheostomies.
  7. Content Article
    The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in an overall surge in new cases of depression and anxiety and an exacerbation of existing mental health issues, with a particular emotional and physical toll on health care workers. Limited resources, longer shifts, disruptions to sleep and to work-life balance and occupational hazards associated with exposure to COVID-19 have contributed to physical and mental fatigue, stress and anxiety and burnout. In this article, published by Wolters Kluwer, the Houston Methodist Hospital share the lessons learned collectively by an interdisciplinary team of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) leadership and collaborating scientists about the experience of occupational fatigue and burnout of intensive care personnel as a result of responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. They propose specific policy recommendations and guidelines for organisational readiness, resilience and disaster mitigation.
  8. Content Article
    The prone position is defined as lying in a horizontal position with the front of the body facing downwards. Its use with critically ill patients with respiratory compromise is known to improve short-term oxygenation and lung compliance. The desired outcome of prone positioning is to improve lung perfusion and oxygenation in patients who are in the early stages of pneumonia or who have an acute lung injury (ALI) or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) which is common in COVID–19 patients. One of the most common complications of nursing patients in the prone position is the occurrence of pressure ulcers. Pressure ulcers are likely to occur as patients are repositioned far less frequently once in prone (generally only after 16 hours) and also the patient may develop significant facial oedema. It is important therefore to take precautions to reduce the risk of pressure ulcers when preparing for and caring for the patient in the prone position. This NHS guidance promotes good skin care during prone positioning. 
  9. Content Article
    If a nasogastric tube (NGT) has been misplaced into the respiratory tract and this is not detected before fluids, feed or medication are given, death or severe harm can be caused. The consequences are even more likely to be fatal for patients who are already critically ill. Most nasogastric ‘Never Events’ of feeding into the respiratory tract through a misplaced tube continue to arise from misinterpretation of x-rays by staff who had not been given training in the ‘four criteria’ technique and were unaware that relying on the position of the tube tip alone on a radiograph can be a fatal error. 
  10. Content Article
    The COVID-19 pandemic is challenging health care systems worldwide; none more so than critical and intensive care settings. Significant attention has been placed on the capacity of intensive care units (ICUs) to respond to a COVID-19 surge, particularly in relation to beds, ventilators, staffing and personal protective equipment. This position statement has been produced by the Australian College of Critical Care Nurses and the Australian College of Infection Prevention and Control (ACIPC) to guide critical care nurses in facilitating next-of-kin presence for patients dying from COVID-19 in the ICU.
  11. Content Article
    The COVID‐19 pandemic has led to the manufacturing of novel devices to protect clinicians from the risk of transmission, including the aerosol box for use in intubation. The authors of this paper, published in Anaesthesia, evaluated the impact of two aerosol boxes (an early‐generation box and a latest‐generation box) on intubations in patients with severe COVID‐19 with an in‐situ simulation crossover study.
  12. Content Article
    A National Patient Safety Alert has been issued on the risk of harm from interruption of high flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) during transfer.
  13. Content Article
    This report, published by the Association of Anaesthetists, gives recommendations based on clinical experiences of managing patients throughout Italy. In particular, the authors describe key elements of clinical management, including: safe oxygen therapy; airway management; personal protective equipment; and non‐technical aspects of caring for patients diagnosed with coronavirus disease 2019. 
  14. Content Article
    This page provides a list of useful resources for healthcare staff who are working in intensive care units and critical care roles during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  15. Content Article
    This lecture, presented to staff at Southport and Ormskirk Hospital NHS Trust on 26 March 2020, gives an overview of the coronavirus, transmission, symptoms and treatment of the virus. Martin Kiernan qualified as a Registered General Nurse in 1984, and obtained a Master in Public Health in 1997. He currently works as a Nurse Consultant where he is responsible for the infection prevention and control programme for an integrated healthcare provider NHS Trust covering acute and primary care. He manages a team of two specialist nurses, a surveillance nurse, a healthcare assistant and an information officer. A significant part of his clinical duties includes assessment and application of policies and guidelines to ensure optimal clinical practice.
  16. Content Article
    This free course from the World Health Organization includes content on clinical management of patients with a severe acute respiratory infection. It is intended for clinicians who are working in intensive care units (ICUs) in low and middle-income countries and managing adult and paediatric patients with severe forms of acute respiratory infection (SARI), including severe pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), sepsis and septic shock. It is a hands-on practical guide to be used by healthcare professionals involved in clinical care management during outbreaks of influenza virus (seasonal) human infection due avian influenza virus (H5N1, H7N9), MERS-CoV, COVID-19 or other emerging respiratory viral epidemics. Learning objectives: By the end of this course, participants should possess some of the necessary tools that can be used to care for the critically ill patient from hospital entry to hospital discharge. Course duration: Approximately 10 hours. Target audience: This course is intended for clinicians who are working in intensive care units (ICUs) in low and middle-income countries.
  17. Content Article
    This teaching presentation, by Kings Hospital clinical fellows, is based on ‘Kings clinical summary guidelines’ when caring for a patient with diagnosed COVID 19 This presentation includes: Disease progression Diagnosis Bloods Imaging Radiology Guidelines Investigations Treatment Organ Support Prognosis Treatment escalation planning Palliative care PPE Resuscitation Intrahospital transfer.
  18. Content Article
    The ICU & Critical Care Nursing Revision is part of the Intensive Nurse blog. It has been designed and structured to assist revision and learning for anyone who is: new to intensive care units (ICU) and critical care participating in an ICU/critical care nursing program or returning due to COVID-19. This blog is part of the Free Open Access Nursing Education (#FOANed) movement which is a global collaboration utilising technology, social media and the agility to discuss relevant healthcare topics in real time. 
  19. Content Article
    The international Society for Rapid Response Systems (iSRRS) is the peak international body related to Rapid Response Teams (RRTs) and Critical Care Outreach (CCO) services around the work. The aim of the iSRRS is to improve the prevention of, and response to acute deterioration in hospitalised patients.
  20. Content Article
    In this letter, published by the International Society for Quality Health Care, Dr Francesco Venneri shares his experience of the response to COVID-19 in Italy from the perspective of his involvement as both a clinical risk manager and as an emergency front line worker.
  21. Content Article
    This video demonstrates how to perform an intubation safely on a patient with coronavirus.
  22. Content Article
    In her latest blog, Claire reflects on the last few months working as a critical care outreach nurse during the pandemic and looks to the future and how we can transition into the new 'normal'. She urges us all to work together to redesign our health and social care services, building a service that meets all our needs.
  23. Content Article
    This guide from ICU Steps, contains advice and information about intensive care. It tells you how critical illness may be treated and what recovery may be like. Not every patient will experience all of these things, but they are more likely to if they have been in intensive care for more than a few days. Most of this guide is written for patients but there is a section specifically for relatives and visitors. By reading the guide, relatives will learn what a patient's recovery may involve and it will give them the answers to some of the questions they may have.
  24. Content Article
    As the pandemic plays out, hospitals are reconfigured to increase critical care capacity, outpatient clinics become virtual, and elective procedures delayed. How are these affecting care for those who are in hospital but don't have COVID-19? In this podcast, Matt Morgan,honorary senior research fellow at Cardiff University, consultant in intensive care medicine and Partha Kar, consultant in diabetes and endocrinology in Portsmouth, join us to discuss how their working week is changing.
  25. Content Article
    To match the increasing demands that the coronavirus pandemic will place on critical care, new and flexible models of care are required. This document: states principles for deploying and redeploying staff to match the needs of a critical care department, independent of where this care is delivered sets out indicative staffing ratios and competencies suggests professional groups that could potentially form part of this new workforce during times of surge and super-surge. This guidance is correct at the time of publishing. However, as it is subject to updates, please use the hyperlinks within the document to confirm the information is accurate.
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