Twenty-four hour presence of physicians in the ICU
Open Access
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Critical Care
- Vol. 5 (3) , 131-137
- https://doi.org/10.1186/cc1012
Abstract
Intensive-care units (ICUs) must be utilised in the most efficient way. Greater input of intensivists leads to better outcomes and more efficient use of resources. 'Closed' ICUs operate as functional units with a competent on-site team and their own management under the supervision of a full-time intensivist directly responsible for the treatment. Twenty-four-hour coverage by on-site physicians is mandatory to maintain the service. At night, the on-site physicians need not necessarily be specialists as long as an experienced intensivist is on call. Because of the shortage of intensivists, such standards will be difficult to maintain everywhere, but they should, at least, be mandatory for larger hospitals serving as regional centres.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Current and Projected Workforce Requirements for Care of the Critically Ill and Patients With Pulmonary DiseaseCan We Meet the Requirements of an Aging Population?JAMA, 2000
- Intensive care unit telemedicine: Alternate paradigm for providing continuous intensivist careCritical Care Medicine, 2000
- EMERGING TRENDS IN ICU MANAGEMENT AND STAFFINGCritical Care Clinics, 2000
- Consequences of discharges from intensive care at nightThe Lancet, 2000
- Organizational Characteristics of Intensive Care Units Related to Outcomes of Abdominal Aortic SurgeryJAMA, 1999
- The benefit of intensivists.1997
- Effects of a Medical Intensivist on Patient Care in a Community Teaching HospitalMayo Clinic Proceedings, 1997
- The dilemma of full-time ICU physician coverage.1997
- Effects of organizational change in the medical intensive care unit of a teaching hospital: a comparison of 'open' and 'closed' formats.1996
- Burnout in the internist-intensivistIntensive Care Medicine, 1996