Essential Guide to Acute Care. Nicola Cooper

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Essential Guide to Acute Care - Nicola Cooper страница 12

Essential Guide to Acute Care - Nicola Cooper

Скачать книгу

pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics: a different approach to anaesthesia is required, and iatrogenic disease is more common in the older population

       Acute illnesses present atypically e.g. with delirium or falls

       Quiescent diseases are exacerbated by acute illness e.g. heart failure may occur due to pneumonia, old neurological signs may become more pronounced with an acute infection

       Some clinical findings are not necessarily pathological in older people: neck stiffness, fine crackles at the lung bases, reduced skin turgor, and bacteriuria. A urinary tract infection cannot be diagnosed on the basis of urinalysis alone.

      Clinical decision‐making should always be made on an individual basis and never on the basis of age alone. However, one has to balance the right to high‐quality care without age discrimination with the wisdom to avoid aggressive but ultimately futile interventions. Involving an experienced physician in difficult decision‐making is often helpful.

      For the majority of healthcare workers who have never worked in an ICU, the benefits and limitations of what is available may be poorly understood. Patients with acute reversible disease benefit most from intensive care if they are admitted sooner rather than later. Waiting for someone to become even more seriously ill before contacting the ICU team does not make physiological sense and is not evidence‐based. On the other hand, admission to the ICU does not guarantee a successful outcome. Some patients may be so ill they are unlikely to recover at all, even with intensive organ support. The overall mortality of patients admitted as an emergency to the ICU in the UK is around 25%, but this varies between units and different patient populations.14,22 All potential admissions should be assessed by an experienced doctor. Patients who are not admitted to intensive care should have a clear plan and their ward care optimised.

      In recent years, healthcare has increasingly focussed on systems and processes that improve patient safety. One important facet of patient safety is ‘human factors’ – how people interact with each other and technology. Good communication, teamwork, and situation awareness can be as important in successfully managing an acutely ill patient as having good medical knowledge and skills.

      Clearly communicating the patient’s current vital signs and key test results is the only way to give the listener a sense of how urgent the situation is. Your colleague may have heard all he needs to know and be on his way, or he may want to go through some more details first. Either way, it is important to communicate clearly what help is required, particularly if you want your colleague to come and see the patient. The senior resident doctor should always be informed about any seriously ill patient, whether or not his expertise is required.

      Situation State who you are, where you are, and why you are calling

      Background Summarise the patient’s relevant history

      Assessment Communicate the patient’s vital signs and key test results

      Recommendation State clearly what you want to happen next

      Readback The listener should summarise what they think you have said and what they are going to do now

       Example:

       Hi – I am Dr X calling from Ward 1 about a sick patient I think may need ICU. Joe Bloggs, 45 years old, no past medical history, was admitted with community acquired pneumonia this morning with a NEWS2 of 3. Over the course of the day, his oxygen requirements have been going up and his blood pressure is now low despite fluid challenges.His current vital signs are: Alert, BP 90/50, HR 110, SpO2 89% on 15 L oxygen via reservoir bag, RR 26, temperature 38°C. A repeat chest X‐ray shows worsening consolidation of the right lung and a repeat blood gas shows … I’d be really grateful if you can come and assess him urgently.

      Key Points – Patients at Risk

       Resuscitation is about recognising and effectively intervening when patients have seriously abnormal vital signs

       There is a wealth of research to show that our systems fail when patients in hospital deteriorate

       Early effective intervention can improve outcome and utilisation of intensive care resources

       Physiological derangement and the need for admission to the ICU is not the same thing. All patients should be assessed by a senior doctor

       In order to communicate clearly to colleagues about acutely ill patients, use SBARR

       Always inform the senior resident doctor about a seriously ill patient.

      1 1 Resuscitation Council UK and Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre (ICNARC). Key statistics from the national cardiac arrest audit 2017/18. https://ncaa.icnarc.org/Home (Accessed October 2019).

      2 2 Diem SJ, Lantos JD, Tulsky JA. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation on television. Miracles and misinformation. N Engl J Med 1996; 334: 1578–1582.

      3 3 Schein RM, Hazday N, Pena N, Ruben BH. Clinical

Скачать книгу