Results 381 to 390 of about 2,158,632 (410)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Sleep in the intensive care unit
Intensive Care Medicine, 2004Abnormalities of sleep are extremely common in critically ill patients, but the mechanisms are poorly understood. About half of total sleep time occurs during the daytime, and circadian rhythm is markedly diminished or lost. Judgments based on inspection consistently overestimate sleep time and do not detect sleep disruption.
Sairam Parthasarathy, Martin J. Tobin
openaire +3 more sources
2010
This chapter discusses the provision of palliative care in ICUs, with an emphasis on end-of-life care. Specifically, challenges and barriers to providing such care in ICUs are described, and recommendations are offered for the provision of symptom assessment and management.
Jennifer McAdam, Kathleen Puntillo
openaire +1 more source
This chapter discusses the provision of palliative care in ICUs, with an emphasis on end-of-life care. Specifically, challenges and barriers to providing such care in ICUs are described, and recommendations are offered for the provision of symptom assessment and management.
Jennifer McAdam, Kathleen Puntillo
openaire +1 more source
New Directions for Mental Health Services, 1988
AbstractA short‐term service for those who are most severely ill, the intensive care unit provides twenty‐four‐hour nursing care and monitoring to help stabilize patients so that they can return to the day hospital for definitive treatment.
openaire +3 more sources
AbstractA short‐term service for those who are most severely ill, the intensive care unit provides twenty‐four‐hour nursing care and monitoring to help stabilize patients so that they can return to the day hospital for definitive treatment.
openaire +3 more sources
INFECTION IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1976An epidemic of infection associated with Serratia marcescens and other Gram‐negative organisms resistant to aminoglycosides and other chemotherapeutic agents occurred in the Intensive Care Unit, and spread to other areas of the hospital. This paper describes the problems of sepsis in the critically ill patient, outlines the occurrence of organisms in ...
openaire +5 more sources
THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT AS A TRAUMA UNIT [PDF]
The ICU plays a pivotal role in the care of the critically injured patient. From the resuscitative phase of care through the life-support phases and finally the recovery phase, advances in ICU care have been made in recent years. As a result, an improved outcome for traumatically injured patients often is seen, and the third peak in the trimodal ...
Samuel A. Tisherman+2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Clinical Nursing, 2016
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES To determine the feasibility and utility of a thematic analysis approach to synthesising qualitative evidence about parental experiences in the neonatal intensive care unit.
Dua'a Fayiz Al Maghaireh+4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES To determine the feasibility and utility of a thematic analysis approach to synthesising qualitative evidence about parental experiences in the neonatal intensive care unit.
Dua'a Fayiz Al Maghaireh+4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Transfusion in the Intensive Care Unit
Surgical Infections, 2005Anemia is a common complication of critical illness. Because tissue hypoxia is a prominent factor in the development of organ dysfunction in the critically ill, conventional wisdom has argued that the transfusion of packed red blood cells can attenuate tissue hypoxia and so improve outcome.Review of pertinent English-language literature.The empiric ...
openaire +3 more sources
Palliative Care in the Intensive Care Unit
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America, 2014Most patients who receive terminal care in the intensive care setting die after withdrawing or limiting of life-sustaining measures provided in the intensive care setting. The integration of palliative care into the intensive care unit (ICU) provides care, comfort, and planning for patients, families, and the medical staff to help decrease the ...
Jame Restau, Pamela Green
openaire +3 more sources
Dysnatremias in the Intensive Care Unit
2010Dysnatremias (hypo- and hypernatremia) are common in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with a prevalence approaching 20-30% in some studies. Recent data reveals that both hypo- and hypernatremia present on admission to or developing in the ICU are independent risk factors for poor prognosis.
Rosner MH, Ronco C
openaire +4 more sources
Palliative care interventions in intensive care unit patients
Intensive Care Medicine, 2021V. Metaxa+10 more
semanticscholar +1 more source