戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ps exist in academic leadership positions in critical care.
2 lth problems and provide great challenges in critical care.
3 lemedicine, one better defined today as tele-critical care.
4 tay (LOS), re-operation, and re-admission to critical care.
5 les regarding advanced practice providers in critical care.
6 d signs and focuses on their applications in critical care.
7 o inform precision therapeutic approaches in critical care.
8 itutes best practice for informed consent in critical care.
9 performance and patient-centered outcomes in critical care.
10 are; this practice is slow to translate into critical care.
11 , impartiality, neutrality-can be applied to critical care.
12 e strategies to improve donor management and critical care.
13  in experimental stress models as well as in critical care.
14 ous catheter-associated infections requiring critical care.
15 ure need for healthcare resources, including critical care.
16 nhance the quality of neonatal and pediatric critical care.
17  costs, and to estimate the cost-utility, of critical care.
18 ity and morbidity for maternal admissions to critical care.
19 venteen experts had subspecialty training in critical care.
20  24 hours (52.8%) and increased admission to critical care (11.1%).
21 (3.6% vs 4.0%, P = 0.74), or re-admission to critical care (2.8% vs 2.9%, P = 0.92).
22  explain the underrepresentation of women in critical care academic leadership positions and identify
23 tudy shows major concerns in the delivery of critical care across Latin America, particularly in huma
24  of hospitalization in the year prior to the critical care admission was 28 hospitalized days/1,000 d
25 d for the next trauma patient who warrants a critical care admission.
26   The VTE risk appears highest in those with critical care admission.
27                                       Modern critical care amasses unprecedented amounts of clinical
28 n humanitarian action is mentioned, yet both critical care and humanitarian action share a fundamenta
29 milies or described a model of engagement in critical care and other vulnerable populations.
30 tance of collaboration between the fields of critical care and rehabilitation to optimize post-COVID-
31 ealthcare resource use was substantial after critical care and remained higher compared with matched
32 oviding rationale for time-limited trials of critical care and suggesting that the timing of decision
33 erstand how family rounds are implemented in critical care and to appraise the evidence on outcomes f
34 clinicians allocate finite resources such as critical care and to support patient involvement in clin
35 mplete segregation of the operating theater, critical care, and inpatient ward areas) or no defined p
36 ed 30-day mortality and morbidity, length of critical care, and overall hospital stay.
37 se of author gender to analyze authorship of critical care articles indexed in PubMed between 2008 an
38                                      Despite critical care being a significant healthcare cost burden
39  mitigate the impact of emergency department critical care boarding on patient outcomes.
40 nner and applying humanitarian principles to critical care can improve the quality of patient care an
41  the success of social distancing is whether critical care capacities are exceeded.
42 Additional interventions, including expanded critical care capacity and an effective therapeutic, wou
43   Our estimates underscore the inadequacy of critical care capacity to handle the burgeoning outbreak
44 uded pediatric and adult emergency medicine, critical care, cardiac critical care, cardiology, neurol
45                                              Critical care cardiologists may be uniquely positioned t
46                      Methods and Results The Critical Care Cardiology Trials Network is a multicenter
47                                   The CCCTN (Critical Care Cardiology Trials Network) is a multicente
48 t emergency medicine, critical care, cardiac critical care, cardiology, neurology, and nursing specia
49                                          The Critical Care Choosing Wisely Task Force recommends that
50 se to transform the methods of pulmonary and critical care clinical research.
51 le instrument to assess moral distress among critical care clinicians and develop tailored interventi
52 ed the importance of raising awareness among critical care clinicians and key stakeholders, advocatin
53 easures and strategies to address burnout in critical care clinicians are needed.
54                                              Critical care clinicians reported that a number of initi
55 ical questions and achieved unanimity on how critical care clinicians should manage conscientious obj
56  The purpose of this study was to assess how critical care clinicians were implementing the Critical
57  to clinical practice from a small sample of critical care clinicians.
58               Fifty years ago, distinguished critical care colleagues identified a syndrome of severe
59 ntation Liver and Intestine and Thoracic and Critical Care Communities of Practice, provides a critic
60 monary disease are foundational goals of the critical care community and the National Heart, Lung, an
61 an Society of Transplantation's Thoracic and Critical Care Community of Practice) are presented here.
62   This finding suggests that, despite recent critical care consensus guidelines recommending institut
63                        The Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium (PC4) was formed to improve the
64  <=18 years of age meeting Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium criteria for ADHF were included
65            We analyzed the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium registry to determine the epide
66 al care rapid response teams are examples of critical care constructs that can provide high-quality c
67        No consensus exists on a standardized critical care content outline for medical student educat
68 p a national undergraduate medical education critical care content outline.
69 nds, the expert panel reached consensus on a critical care content outline.
70 al consensus undergraduate medical education critical care content outline.
71 onal, multistakeholder-recommended pediatric critical care core outcome set for inclusion in clinical
72 f a national undergraduate medical education critical care curriculum.
73  were potentially preventable (postoperative critical care delivery variables and complications).
74 ions on how to implement scalable models for critical care delivery, cultivate educational tools for
75 an and organizational factors affecting tele-critical care delivery.
76 y intensivists are an essential component of critical care delivery.
77 sychologic, and cognitive problems following critical care discharge.
78 used for diagnostic and management of common critical care diseases like sepsis, acute kidney injury,
79 s involved in airway management among junior critical care doctors.
80  follows: 1) undergraduate medical education critical care educators, 2) residency program directors
81                 There were no differences in critical care end points between groups.
82        Additionally, changes in standardized critical care end points were compared between donors in
83 aft survival for all organs along with donor critical care end points.
84 te inflammatory response attributable to the critical care environment.
85            Trauma resuscitations are complex critical care events that present patient safety-related
86 care is an established mechanism to leverage critical care expertise to ICUs and beyond, but systemat
87 uage medical interpretation during pediatric critical care family meetings.
88                                    Pulmonary critical care fellows performed and documented their goa
89                                    Pulmonary/critical care fellows.
90 ion of women and racial/ethnic groups across critical care fellowship types.
91 ritically ill infants following surgical and critical care for long-gap esophageal atresia (LGEA) - i
92 ts of the GenOMICC (Genetics Of Mortality In Critical Care) genome-wide association study in 2,244 cr
93  to significantly influence the pace of tele-critical care growth and adoption.
94           Among a large, diverse assembly of critical care guideline recommendations using Grading of
95           We examined recommendations within critical care guidelines to describe the pairing pattern
96 ions addressed by IOM-compliant pulmonary or critical care guidelines were addressed by expert panels
97                                              Critical care had higher rates of both de-escalation and
98 relatively few cost-effectiveness studies in critical care have been published (average 4.6 studies p
99              Rationale: Advances in neonatal critical care have greatly improved the survival of pret
100  time, significant changes in healthcare and critical care have occurred.
101 om the National Institute of Health Research Critical Care Health Informatics Collaborative was studi
102                           Rationale: Whether critical care improvements over the last 10 years extend
103                       Applying principles of critical care in a context-specific manner and applying
104 are constructs that can provide high-quality critical care in all environments.
105 mme is the national clinical audit for adult critical care in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
106                    Estimated cost-utility of critical care in Finland was of high value.
107 ision-making and communication challenges in critical care, including discordance about prognosis, mi
108                              Currently, many critical care indices are not captured automatically at
109 ers, adult outpatient clinics, and adult non-critical care inpatient wards accounted for 26.4% (95% C
110 rgeons, hepatologists, anesthesiologists and critical care intensivists, radiologists, pathologists,
111  Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome for critical care intervention (0.69) and mortality (0.66) w
112 d, and their relationships to the receipt of critical care intervention and inhospital mortality were
113 tial Organ Failure Assessment for predicting critical care intervention was 38%.
114 .5%) patients admitted to the ICU received a critical care intervention.
115 ndomized controlled trials of anesthesia and critical care interventions and to determine the frequen
116 Failure Assessment scores frequently receive critical care interventions.
117                                         Tele-critical care is an established mechanism to leverage cr
118 cal care principles conveys the message that critical care is an integral part of health care and sho
119               Estimating the cost-utility of critical care is necessary to ensure reasonable use of r
120                                              Critical care is not limited to the walls of a hospital,
121            A pragmatic, codesigned model for critical care is offered as a suggested approach for cli
122 en well distinguished from the conditions of critical care itself.
123 xpert panel identified 19 highly recommended critical care knowledge topics and procedural skills.
124 evaluate gender differences in authorship of critical care literature.Methods: We used a validated da
125 espiratory failure refractory to traditional critical care management and optimal mechanical ventilat
126                                              Critical care management plays an important role in pati
127 a plethora of challenges including acute and critical care management, long-term care and rehabilitat
128 ns who are board certified in cardiology and critical care medicine ("dual-boarded cardiologists").
129 Portuguese, and incorporated into Society of Critical Care Medicine and American Heart Association/Pe
130 sociated consequences) of gender inequity in critical care medicine and determine strategies to attra
131 vers and implications, and are applicable to critical care medicine and more broadly throughout medic
132      Participants identified a gender gap in critical care medicine and provided important insight in
133                  Accordingly, the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the American College of Emerg
134  group of experts assigned by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Inten
135 as appointed and assembled by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the Extracorporeal Life Suppo
136 e ICU has been recommended by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the Leapfrog Consortium.
137           Participants unanimously described critical care medicine as a specialty practiced predomin
138                                   Society of Critical Care Medicine Discovery Viral Infection and Res
139 ss the overall level of burnout in pediatric critical care medicine fellows and examine factors that
140                                    Pediatric critical care medicine fellows and program directors.
141                                    Pediatric critical care medicine fellows in the United States are
142 l venous catheter placement across pediatric critical care medicine fellowship programs.
143                 In developing the Society of Critical Care Medicine guidelines for family-centered ca
144                                              Critical care medicine is a medical specialty where wome
145                                              Critical care medicine is far from the first medical fie
146 t from editors at 31 respiratory, sleep, and critical care medicine journals to consolidate contempor
147 alence of and risk factors for burnout among critical care medicine physician assistants.
148                  Severe burnout is common in critical care medicine physician assistants.
149                                    Pediatric critical care medicine program directors of Accreditatio
150 duate Medical Education-accredited pediatric critical care medicine programs between July 2017 and Se
151                               Most pediatric critical care medicine programs use a global assessment
152                      The American College of Critical Care Medicine provided 2002 and 2007 guidelines
153 14, the Tele-ICU Committee of the Society of Critical Care Medicine published an article regarding th
154                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine standard operating procedures man
155  a staff physician in 12 of 60 ICUs (20%), a Critical Care Medicine trainee in 14 of 60 (23%), and a
156 ear residents (R2-R5) in 46 of 60 (77%), and Critical Care Medicine trainees in 19 of 60 (32%).
157 esidents and 14 of 19 units (74%) covered by Critical Care Medicine trainees.
158  are consistent with other procedures across critical care medicine training programs, adult and pedi
159 ormation from surveys done by the Society of Critical Care Medicine was included given the relevance
160  each extensively involved in the Society of Critical Care Medicine's ICU Liberation Campaign, review
161 n, Focused Professional Practice Evaluation, critical care medicine, healthcare quality, and The Join
162 erventional radiologists, and specialists in critical care medicine, infectious disease, and nutritio
163 ss with a diverse working group representing critical care medicine, palliative care, pediatric medic
164 erican Academy of Pediatrics, the Society of Critical Care Medicine, the American Medical Association
165 enging clinical scenarios in in-hospital and critical care medicine.
166 sional Practice Evaluation implementation in critical care medicine.
167 os Angeles, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine.
168 rofessional Practice Evaluation processes in critical care medicine.
169 as of improvement within our own Division of Critical Care Medicine.
170                                  Acute care, critical care, mental health acute care, and longterm ca
171 umonia with sepsis (CAP + S) not admitted to critical care.Methods: We conducted a randomized, double
172 essure lowering, neurosurgery, and access to critical care might all be beneficial in acute intracere
173  targeted forecasting of hospitalization and critical care needs.
174 vere disease (eg, hypoxic encephalopathy and critical care neuropathy) from those caused directly or
175 erest in patient and family participation in critical care-not just as part of the bedside, but as pa
176 CAM-ICU was administered by two well-trained critical care nurses and compared with reference standar
177       The sensitivities (95% CI) for the two critical care nurses when using the Arabic CAM-ICU compa
178                                              Critical care nurses, are the primary care providers to
179 onal aspects that were not restricted by the critical care organization definition or regulatory mand
180                                          The critical care organization survey recorded substantial v
181 e providers of established U.S. and Canadian critical care organizations and provides a research agen
182                         Approximately 80% of critical care organizations had dedicated advanced pract
183  the effects of the integrative structure of critical care organizations on outcomes at the levels of
184                            More than half of critical care organizations reported having burnout prev
185         The research agenda for the study of critical care organizations should include studies that
186 ewsletter) to query members of U.S. national critical care organizations.
187 for ICU leaders is crucial to the success of critical care organizations.
188 bjectives: To examine the temporal trends of critical care outcomes in minority and non-minority-serv
189 ed core outcome set is lacking for pediatric critical care outcomes.
190 ophysiologies responsible for poor pediatric critical care outcomes.
191 ) purposively sampled from four specialties (critical care, palliative care, oncology, and surgery).
192 ically ill, (2) the outcomes associated with critical care patient boarding, and (3) local strategies
193 lizing the potential for big data to improve critical care patient outcomes will require unprecedente
194 emonstrated its potential for characterizing critical care patients and environmental factors.
195  injury, myocardial injury, and mortality in critical care patients remain unknown.
196 phen thus produces modest fever reduction in critical care patients, along with clinically important
197 enting a freshest available RBC strategy for critical care patients, there is no evidence to suggest
198 mortality, and renal injury in postoperative critical care patients.
199 mulative fluid balance on mortality in adult critical care patients.
200 ion efforts are particularly important among critical-care patients who are older, have altered mobil
201  reduce multidrug-resistant organisms in non-critical-care patients.
202                                      In this Critical Care Perspective, we discuss the historical con
203                   A position paper outlining critical care pharmacist activities was last published i
204 this taskforce delineate the activities of a critical care pharmacist and the scope of pharmacy servi
205 omain of patient care, primarily relating to critical care pharmacist duties and pharmacy services.
206 made for patient care, primarily relating to critical care pharmacist duties and pharmacy services.
207 , 21 recommendations address the role of the critical care pharmacist in patient and medication safet
208                                              Critical care pharmacists are essential members of the m
209 ate the statement from a paper in 2000 about critical care pharmacy practice and makes recommendation
210  of central venous catheters and access to a critical care physician during sepsis treatment are impo
211  outpatient ICU recovery clinic visit with a critical care physician, nurse practitioner, pharmacist,
212                                              Critical care physicians continue to be challenged to re
213 anical ventilation, drawing the attention of critical care physicians to the potential injurious effe
214 k prediction models specific to the maternal critical care population.
215 hods, results, and relevant implications for critical care practice and training.
216 iritual fulfilment are central challenges of critical care practice in the USA.
217  drug-interference could confound its use in critical care practice.
218 sign, methods, results, and implications for critical care practice.
219 hods, results, and relevant implications for critical care practice.
220                                    Promoting critical care principles conveys the message that critic
221      Regular and consistent consideration of critical care principles in humanitarian settings provid
222 hat they obtained valid informed consent for critical care procedures with the use of bundled consent
223  Moral distress is a common experience among critical care professionals, leading to frustration, wit
224  safely administered in a setting with basic critical care, provided that there is a continuous patie
225 hreatening occurrence that is encountered by critical care providers.
226 ically significant results in anesthesia and critical care randomized controlled trials are often fra
227 ion among team members, and context-specific critical care rapid response teams are examples of criti
228 ality of evidence regarding their effects on critical care remains weak and the risk of bias high.
229 option of rapid genomic testing in pediatric critical care requires robust clinical and laboratory pa
230 and <19 years old in Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network intensive care units with
231 nd future directions for adult pulmonary and critical care research, the NHLBI assembled a multidisci
232  authors and one-fourth of senior authors of critical care research, with minimal increase over the p
233 f its entries hold promise for observational critical care research.
234 egarding gender differences in authorship of critical care research.Objectives: To evaluate gender di
235 on staffing schedules for each unit from the Critical Care Resources Registry 2016-2017 annual survey
236 ase preventable harm by providing additional critical care resources to patients with clinical deteri
237          Because of overcrowding and limited critical care resources, critically ill patients in the
238 (clonidine and dexmedetomidine) in pediatric critical care sedation.
239                                Compared to a critical care setting, GI complications are not commonly
240 ion-making for unrepresented patients in the critical care setting.
241 ician-assisted suicide and euthanasia in the critical care setting.
242  more accurate assessment of patients in the critical care setting.
243 g on behalf of unrepresented patients in the critical care setting.Methods: An interprofessional, mul
244 lications are not commonly observed in a non-critical care setting; however, they still have a negati
245  of advanced practice providers in acute and critical care settings continue to increase.
246 atients with sepsis and organ dysfunction in critical care settings have broadly been negative.
247                     All patients admitted to critical care settings in the centers.
248 s and quality of infectious diseases care in critical care settings.
249 itical care clinicians were implementing the Critical Care Societies Collaborative Choosing Wisely re
250               However, although professional critical care societies have proposed new clinical crite
251 nts, and pharmacist members of four national critical care societies in the United States.
252  thoracic surgeon, 2 anesthesiologists and 1 critical care specialist assessed the risk for aerosol d
253 ltrasound is recommended/mandated by several critical care specialties.
254               To date, we are unable to find critical care specific literature on the implementation
255 ad a significantly longer median duration of critical care stay (25.5 vs. 15.5 d, P = 0.02).
256                      Alberta Health Services Critical Care Strategic Clinical Network.
257 m Brazil (ORganizational CHaractEeriSTics in cRitical cAre study) and England (Intensive Care Nationa
258 l stay of 29 days (25% required preoperative critical care support).
259                  Patients recruited from non-critical care surgical and medical wards were randomly a
260                                The number of critical care survivors is growing, but their long-term
261 derstanding of the long-term consequences of critical care survivorship is essential.
262 n the involvement of family members in daily critical care team rounds.
263 e essential members of the multiprofessional critical care team.
264 rch terms included electronic ICU, tele-ICU, critical care telemedicine, and ICU telemedicine with ap
265 ressure (BP) management is a crucial part of critical care that directly affects morbidity and mortal
266 ed frequently severe complications requiring critical care that induced significant short- and long-t
267  Despite advances in surgical techniques and critical care, the rate of complications and death is st
268 sociated with admission factors, exposure to critical care therapies, and pain and sedation managemen
269 we observed that complications and prolonged critical care therapy drive prolonged critical illness m
270 nces among these postgraduate intensive care/critical care training program.
271 he SARS-CoV-2 and support clinicians without critical care training who may be suddenly asked to care
272 valuated for powering bias among high-impact critical care trials and the associated risk of masking
273               The design of most high-impact critical care trials biased results toward the null by o
274 n Institutes of Health Research and Canadian Critical Care Trials Group Research Coordinator Fund.
275 ter define the competencies required in core critical care ultrasonography and standardize the assess
276                                              Critical care ultrasonography has become established wit
277       If not found, professionals related to critical care ultrasonography were contacted.
278 d program have defined competencies for core critical care ultrasonography.
279      Paired blood cultures were taken in the Critical Care Unit at a teaching hospital.
280 rtment (ED) dwell time before admission to a critical care unit has an adverse effect on patient outc
281 se staffing trends analyses, while acute and critical care units in 123 facilities were used in the a
282                        Twenty-five pediatric critical care units in the United States, the Netherland
283 re suggests that dexmedetomidine sedation in critical care units is associated with reduced incidence
284       All children admitted to the pediatric critical care units on designated study days (n = 994).
285 ortality amongst sepsis patients admitted to critical care units.
286                                              Critical care units.
287 rates of direct discharge to home across all critical care units.
288 .1%) of all antibiotics were administered in critical care units.
289  were randomised and their participating non-critical-care units assigned to either routine care or d
290 p) in the intervention period across 194 non-critical-care units in 53 hospitals.
291 onisation on pathogens and infections in non-critical-care units is unknown.
292 spitalized for cytotoxic chemotherapy at non-critical-care units were offered daily 2% CHG bathing.
293 uate the use of chlorhexidine bathing in non-critical-care units, with an intervention similar to one
294 ients with hematological malignancies at non-critical-care units.
295 spitalized for cytotoxic chemotherapy at non-critical-care units.
296 hexidine and targeted nasal mupirocin in non-critical-care units.
297 ssion was 28 hospitalized days/1,000 d; post critical care was 88 hospitalized days/1,000 d for those
298                                              Critical care workforce and staffing models are myriad a
299 ides analyses and perspective of a survey of critical care workforce, workload, and burnout among the
300  training and staffing models for the future critical care workforce.

 
Page Top