1. The critical care literature 2023.
- Author
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Winters ME, Hu K, Martinez JP, Mallemat H, and Brady WJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Resuscitation methods, Critical Illness therapy, SARS-CoV-2, Critical Care organization & administration, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 therapy
- Abstract
The number of critically ill patients that present to emergency departments across the world continues to rise. In fact, the proportion of critically ill patients in emergency departments is now higher than pre-COVID-19 pandemic levels. [1] The emergency physician (EP) is typically the first physician to evaluate and resuscitate the critically ill patient. Given the continued shortage of intensive care unit (ICU) beds, persistent staff shortages, and overall inefficient hospital throughput, EPs are often tasked with providing intensive care to these patients long beyond the initial resuscitation phase. Prolonged boarding of critically ill patients in the ED is associated with increased ICU and hospital length of stay, increased adverse events, ED staff burnout, decreased patient and family satisfaction, and, most importantly, increased mortality. [2-5]. As such, it is imperative for the EP to be knowledgeable about recent literature in resuscitation and critical care medicine, so that critically ill ED patients can continue to receive the best, most up-to-date evidence-based care. This review summarizes important articles published in 2023 that pertain to the resuscitation and management of select critically ill ED patients. Topics included in this article include cardiac arrest, post-cardiac arrest care, septic shock, rapid sequence intubation, severe pneumonia, transfusions, trauma, and critical procedures., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors do not have any financial conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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