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1 cists, and student members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
2  to the leadership council of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
3 t, Lung, and Blood Institute; and Society of Critical Care Medicine.
4 gned to build the workforce in pulmonary and critical care medicine.
5 ons were supervised by attendings trained in Critical Care Medicine.
6 ntific and clinical leaders in pulmonary and critical care medicine.
7 es a unique framework for future research in critical care medicine.
8 volume is one of the most difficult tasks in critical care medicine.
9 asound has a role in pediatric emergency and critical care medicine.
10  potential benefits of early mobilization in critical care medicine.
11 th respect to published standards of care in critical care medicine.
12 ve strategies to ensure gender parity within critical care medicine.
13 an essential part of the current practice of critical care medicine.
14  relationship between emergency medicine and critical care medicine.
15 e benzodiazepine midazolam is widely used in critical care medicine.
16 ok forward to in the fields of pulmonary and critical care medicine.
17 ntinue to advance the theory and practice of critical care medicine.
18 d random physician members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
19 nasia holds implications for the practice of critical care medicine.
20 te standardization of physician education in critical care medicine.
21 as novel and effective agents in the area of critical care medicine.
22 mation has become one of the major topics in critical care medicine.
23 hysician who practices pulmonary medicine or critical care medicine.
24 Palliative care is an important component of critical care medicine.
25 ions commonly encountered in the practice of critical care medicine.
26 s that occur during disease states common to critical care medicine.
27 cal care physician members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
28 cal trainees in regards to the principles of critical care medicine.
29  medical education with special reference to critical care medicine.
30 tem, which can be utilized in the context of critical care medicine.
31  Critical Care Study Group of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
32 t Physicians Consensus Conference/Society of Critical Care Medicine.
33 quired for independent practice in pediatric critical care medicine.
34  Care Act will likely impact the practice of critical care medicine.
35 frequently cited than industry-led trials in critical care medicine.
36 ducation-accredited subspecialty programs in critical care medicine.
37 assessment is becoming an essential skill in critical care medicine.
38  vs others) on the impact of large trials in critical care medicine.
39 ar diseases with knowledge and experience in critical care medicine.
40 e and may thus improve disease management in critical care medicine.
41 elect to receive e-mails from the Society of Critical Care Medicine.
42 rials and its translation to the practice of critical care medicine.
43 om the membership of the American College of Critical Care Medicine (ACCM), the Society of Critical C
44 aterial published by the American College of Critical Care Medicine, Accreditation Council for Gradua
45 te progress in renal replacement therapy and critical care medicine, acute renal failure (ARF) still
46                          American College of Critical Care Medicine adult guidelines for hemodynamic
47                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine Advocacy Committee recognized tha
48 y, 83% of surveyed intensivists would choose critical care medicine again, evidencing the strong voca
49 rld Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine, American Association of Critical
50 Portuguese, and incorporated into Society of Critical Care Medicine and American Heart Association/Pe
51 ull Ethics Committees of American College of Critical Care Medicine and American Thoracic Society wer
52  studies on administrative topics related to critical care medicine and be better prepared to partici
53 d in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine and Chest.
54 ful career development in academic pulmonary/critical care medicine and discover strategies that prom
55  developed for content validity by pediatric critical care medicine and education experts using CanME
56 ialty task force of international experts in critical care medicine and endocrinology and members of
57 th and without active board certification in critical care medicine and estimated the maximum proport
58                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine and four other major critical car
59  of 11 experts in the disciplines related to critical care medicine and infectious diseases was conve
60 anagement system developed by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and managed by Tri-Analytics and
61 istinct discipline that has developed out of critical care medicine and neurology.
62 e-learning is actively being integrated into critical care medicine and nursing training programs for
63 d in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine and other major journals that hav
64                              Currently, only critical care medicine and pain medicine are recognized
65  nonanesthesiologist subspecialists, such as critical care medicine and pain medicine.
66 tical care is the new frontier for pediatric critical care medicine and pediatric neurology.
67 ntended to support epidemiologic research in critical care medicine and serve as a resource to evalua
68 sessment of resident clinical performance in critical care medicine and summarized the strengths and
69 guidelines, as recommended by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the American Thoracic Society
70 e with the recommendations of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the American Thoracic Society
71  to train individuals with special skills in critical care medicine and the concept of "hospitalists"
72 nvened from the membership of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Inten
73                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Inten
74  epidemiology was convened by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Inten
75  endocrinology and members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Inten
76 nvened from the membership of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the Infectious Diseases Socie
77 thods, all of them members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and/or the European Society of In
78 cians, American Thoracic Society, Society of Critical Care Medicine, and Association of Pulmonary and
79 r fellowship training in pulmonary medicine, critical care medicine, and combined programs.
80 xperts in patient safety, hospital medicine, critical care medicine, and METs.
81  This activity was funded by the Society for Critical Care Medicine, and no industry support was prov
82                  Because patients in RCTs in critical care medicine-and patients in intensive care un
83  The authors view the activities involved in critical care medicine as composing a complex adaptive s
84             In 2006, the American College of Critical Care Medicine assembled a 20-member task force
85                      The American College of Critical Care Medicine assembled a 20-person, multidisci
86                                              Critical care medicine attendings and fellows covered on
87 ed by experienced intensive care physicians (critical care medicine attendings and fellows).
88 ynamic diseases is increasingly important in critical care medicine because of the higher prevalence
89 005, the total number of U.S. hospitals with critical care medicine beds decreased by 12.2% (from 3,5
90       From 2000 to 2010, U.S. hospitals with critical care medicine beds decreased by 17% (3,586-2,97
91 al beds decreased by 2.2% (655,785-641,395), critical care medicine beds increased by 17.8% (88,235-1
92                                              Critical care medicine beds increased by 6.5% (from 88,2
93                                              Critical care medicine beds per 100,000 total population
94                        The majority (90%) of critical care medicine beds were classified as intensive
95                                              Critical care medicine beds, use, and costs in the Unite
96 978-83,417) or pediatric (2.7%; 1,866-1,916) critical care medicine beds.
97 s who were board certified in cardiology and critical care medicine before July 2015.
98 mortality worldwide and a serious problem in critical care medicine, but the immunophysiological proc
99                        The increasing use of critical care medicine by the premature/neonatal and Med
100 delivery and outcomes, and the profession of critical care medicine can and should be instrumental in
101  of information dissemination for Society of Critical Care Medicine career development initiatives fr
102 r of physicians are seeking dual training in critical care medicine (CCM) and infectious diseases (ID
103       This study reviews the first decade of critical care medicine (CCM) certification by the Americ
104   Supplementing ID training with training in critical care medicine (CCM) might be a way to regenerat
105              All pulmonary/critical care and critical care medicine (CCM) program directors in the Un
106 on of federal Medicare databases to identify critical care medicine (CCM) use, cost discrepancies, an
107 ernal medicine (IM) physicians to certify in critical care medicine (CCM) via the American Board of I
108 tionship between emergency medicine (EM) and critical care medicine (CCM).
109                        Among first-time ABIM Critical Care Medicine Certification Examination examine
110 e American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Critical Care Medicine Certification Examination in 2008
111 programs had trainees who completed the ABIM Critical Care Medicine Certification Examination, totali
112                    Therefore, the Society of Critical Care Medicine charged this Outcomes Task Force
113                    Therefore, the Society of Critical Care Medicine charged this Task Force with deve
114 participate during their mandatory four-week critical care medicine clerkship.
115  2014 update of the 2007 American College of Critical Care Medicine "Clinical Guidelines for Hemodyna
116                             A major focus on critical care medicine concerns the institution of life-
117 idities was developed at the 2010 Society of Critical Care Medicine conference on improving long-term
118  2017 plenary lecture at the 47th Society of Critical Care Medicine Congress is to provide clinical I
119 rican College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine Consensus Conference criteria, fr
120 rican College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine consensus criteria.
121                                              Critical care medicine continues to grow in a shrinking
122 onse to these new guidelines, the Society of Critical Care Medicine convened a task force to develop
123        In the same period, the proportion of critical care medicine cost to the gross domestic produc
124                              Although annual critical care medicine costs increased by 44.2% (from $5
125                Between 2000 and 2010, annual critical care medicine costs nearly doubled (92.2%; $56-
126                           From 2000 to 2005, critical care medicine costs per day increased by 30.4%
127                                     In 2005, critical care medicine costs represented 13.4% of hospit
128                                              Critical care medicine costs were compared with national
129 edicine Ethics Committees and the Society of Critical Care Medicine Council were included in the stat
130 hysician assistant members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine coupled with personal contacts.
131 that understaffing may exist, the Society of Critical Care Medicine created a taskforce to generate g
132                            The percentage of critical care medicine days used by Medicare decreased b
133 nd national health expenditures allocated to critical care medicine decreased by 1.6% and 1.8%, respe
134 rican College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine definitions of sepsis or sepsis s
135 American Thoracic Society and the Society of Critical Care Medicine) developed the Berlin Definition,
136 ysis shows that follow-up times of trials in critical care medicine differ substantially.
137 ctioning intensive care unit under a unified critical care medicine division in a university teaching
138 ns who are board certified in cardiology and critical care medicine ("dual-boarded cardiologists").
139 fied from general solicitation at Society of Critical Care Medicine Educational and Scientific Sympos
140 eview and general solicitation at Society of Critical Care Medicine Educational and Scientific Sympos
141  Twenty-four 4th-yr students enrolled in the critical care medicine elective.
142 ty task force of 16 international experts in critical care medicine, endocrinology, and guideline met
143 rovide clarity to the width and scope of the critical care medicine enterprise within the U.S. health
144 approved by consensus of the full Society of Critical Care Medicine Ethics Committees and the Society
145 ication and validated by the 2001 Society of Critical Care Medicine/European Society of Intensive Car
146                                For pulmonary/critical care medicine faculty, current federal educatio
147 eparation of this presentation by one of the critical care medicine faculty.
148  Care Family Needs Inventory, the Society of Critical Care Medicine Family Needs Assessment, the Crit
149                                    Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine Fellow's area under the curve for
150 sed the accuracy and timeliness of Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine Fellow's performance of goal-dire
151                                    Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine Fellows and intensivists made a t
152  appraisal exercises used in the training of critical care medicine fellows appear to improve both ab
153 ransthoracic echocardiography curriculum for critical care medicine fellows participating in 1- and 2
154                                    Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine Fellows performed 154 goal-direct
155                   We assessed the ability of critical care medicine fellows to obtain and interpret f
156                              After training, critical care medicine fellows were able to rapidly obta
157                          Seventeen pediatric critical care medicine fellows were recruited in 2012 an
158 acheal intubation performed by pulmonary and critical care medicine fellows when compared with direct
159 aged into the intensive care unit by on-site critical care medicine fellows.
160 eaching palliative care to multidisciplinary critical care medicine fellows.
161  Respondents to listserve queries (>100) and critical care medicine fellowship director and advanced
162 lly, Internet searches and e-mail queries to critical care medicine fellowship program directors and
163                              Trainees in our critical care medicine fellowship program.
164 asures of proficiency can be integrated into critical care medicine fellowship training programs.
165 an College for Graduate Medical Education or Critical Care Medicine fellowship), and institutional (s
166 incentives for recent graduates to enter the critical care medicine field, suggestions for improvemen
167 Guidelines for the continuum of education in critical care medicine from residency through specialty
168 ikely attributable to the adherence of basic critical care medicine fundamentals.
169   Despite relatively low American College of Critical Care Medicine-graded evidence in the pediatric
170                 In developing the Society of Critical Care Medicine guidelines for family-centered ca
171 red to determine whether American College of Critical Care Medicine guidelines for hemodynamic suppor
172 embrane oxygenation, and American College of Critical Care Medicine guidelines in the newborn and ped
173                      The role of surgeons in critical care medicine has a long and esteemed past.
174                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine has also assembled a task force t
175                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine has developed pain, agitation, an
176       The Surgical Section of the Society of Critical Care Medicine has developed this position state
177 st three decades, the specialty of pediatric critical care medicine has grown rapidly, leading to a n
178                      The medical practice of critical care medicine has long been one of aggressive a
179                                              Critical care medicine has matured greatly as a field in
180                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine has representatives on the nation
181 rican College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine (i.e., systemic inflammatory resp
182  based on the criteria set by the Society of Critical Care Medicine in conjunction with positive bloo
183                       Physician education in critical care medicine in the United States should encom
184 many of these issues, discuss the history of critical care medicine in the United States, and review
185 ntioxidant therapy has shown some promise in critical care medicine in which glutathione depletion an
186                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine In-Training Section, whose primar
187 velopment, and opinions about the Society of Critical Care Medicine In-Training Section.
188 eed of further development by the Society of Critical Care Medicine In-Training Section.
189  critically appraise current volatile use in critical care medicine including current research, techn
190  in many disorders relevant to pulmonary and critical care medicine, including apnea, hypoxemia, pulm
191 ortion of the gross domestic product used by critical care medicine increased by 13.7%.
192 tion of Critical Care Nurses, and Society of Critical Care Medicine Intensive Care Unit Design Award
193 om the American Thoracic Society, Society of Critical Care Medicine, International Society for Heart
194 nsivists and a lack of public awareness that critical care medicine is even a distinct specialty.
195                                              Critical care medicine is more cost controlled than othe
196                                  The goal of critical care medicine is to support organ function and
197 ure (2006-14) was searched by the Society of Critical Care Medicine librarian using the keywords: sep
198 orty-nine of approximately 16,000 Society of Critical Care Medicine members responded to the survey (
199  and Children with Septic Shock." Society of Critical Care Medicine members were identified from gene
200 es listed as ICU directors in the Society of Critical Care Medicine Membership Directory.
201 ives need improved marketing, the Society of Critical Care Medicine membership is willing to help sup
202                  Over half of the Society of Critical Care Medicine membership surveyed lack a career
203          The focus on improving education in critical care medicine must begin early in medical schoo
204 used attention and the specialty of surgical critical care medicine needs this attention.
205 ch that may include maternal-fetal medicine, critical care medicine, nephrology, and neonatology spec
206 tes increased by 10.4% (58.6-64.6%), whereas critical care medicine occupancy rates were stable (rang
207 rce was convened, incorporating expertise in critical care medicine, organ donor management, and tran
208                                          The critical care medicine payer mix is evolving, with Medic
209                                              Critical care medicine physician assistant members of th
210                            Higher patient-to-critical care medicine physician assistant ratios and pr
211                                     From 431 critical care medicine physician assistants invited, 135
212                We used SurveyMonkey to query critical care medicine physician assistants on demograph
213 alence of and risk factors for burnout among critical care medicine physician assistants.
214                  Severe burnout is common in critical care medicine physician assistants.
215 nd with relevance to the evolving Society of Critical Care Medicine, postintensive care syndrome, and
216 e Medicine, and Association of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Program Directors reached consens
217 mbership of the Association of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Program Directors, soliciting inf
218 own local hospital organizations or regional critical care medicine programs.
219                      The American College of Critical Care Medicine provided 2002 and 2007 guidelines
220             In 2013, the American College of Critical Care Medicine published a revised version of th
221 highly cited randomized controlled trials in critical care medicine published between 1998 and 2008.
222                      In 2001, the Society of Critical Care Medicine published practice model guidelin
223 inical practice guidelines of the Society of Critical Care Medicine recommend monitoring for the pres
224                   The certification exams in critical care medicine remain under the aegis of the ind
225 te the fragility index of clinical trials in critical care medicine reporting a statistically signifi
226 e Canadian Intensive Care Foundation and the Critical Care Medicine Residency Program and Critical Ca
227 active board certification in cardiology and critical care medicine, respectively.
228 lth care professionals (nursing, anesthesia, critical care, medicine, respiratory therapy, and pharma
229 ith certification of added qualifications in critical care medicine reviewed the findings.
230                           At the end of each critical care medicine rotation, all students interacted
231                      At the beginning of the critical care medicine rotation, the intervention group
232 oach used to develop the American College of Critical Care Medicine's 2013 ICU Pain, Agitation, and D
233  citations extracted for the 2013 Society of Critical Care Medicine's Clinical Practice Guidelines fo
234 ractitioners would like to assist Society of Critical Care Medicine's efforts in career development (
235 hrane databases, and the American College of Critical Care Medicine's Pain, Agitation, Delirium Manag
236 istributed by blast E-mail to the Society of Critical Care Medicine's Respiratory Care Section member
237                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) can provide valuable exper
238 f Chest Physicians (ACCP) and the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) convened a "Consensus Conf
239 ritical Care Medicine (ACCM), the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM), and the American Associat
240 n Thoracic Society (ATS), and the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM), joined the U.S. Critical
241 n Thoracic Society (ATS), and the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM), joined the US Critical Il
242          Physician members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM).
243 tee of the Surgery Section of the Society of Critical Care Medicine sent surveys by e-mail to all SCC
244                      The proportional use of critical care medicine services by Medicare beneficiarie
245  Expert task forces have proposed that adult critical care medicine services should be regionalized i
246 rary benchmark for the strategic planning of critical care medicine services within the U.S. healthca
247                              The aim of good critical care medicine should be to establish a meaningf
248                                  Society for Critical Care Medicine state that training in "good comm
249                       Fifty-one postgraduate critical care medicine subspecialty trainees participate
250                               The Society of Critical Care Medicine supports the seven-step process p
251             Specialties represented included critical care medicine, surgery, internal medicine, infe
252 ummarize findings of the American College of Critical Care Medicine Task Force on Models of Critical
253 ion for Respiratory Care/American College of Critical Care Medicine Task Force on ventilator weaning.
254                              This Society of Critical Care Medicine Task Force report provides an ove
255 al ICUs are staffed by physicians trained in critical care medicine, that is not commonly the case in
256  the collaborative efforts of the Society of Critical Care Medicine, the American College of Chest Ph
257 ogists without active board certification in critical care medicine, those with active certification
258 re novel approaches in educating trainees in critical care medicine to better prepare future physicia
259 s to improve educational designs in teaching critical care medicine to medical students, residents, a
260 ition from a multiple specialty provision of critical care medicine to that of a single binational pa
261 8% (88,235-103,900), a 20.4% increase in the critical care medicine-to-hospital bed ratio (13.5-16.2%
262                                              Critical care medicine trainees and faculty must acquire
263 owledge and comfort with communication among critical care medicine trainees.
264                    Postgraduate subspecialty critical care medicine trainees.
265 l examination in the assessment of pediatric critical care medicine trainees.
266                              More structured critical care medicine training is feasible within a mat
267 espite therapeutic advances in pulmonary and critical care medicine, TRALI is now considered to be on
268                Our updated and comprehensive critical care medicine use and cost analysis provides a
269 ith Medicaid increasing in its percentage of critical care medicine use.
270 ary, multispecialty task force of experts in critical care medicine was convened from the membership
271                        A recent editorial in Critical Care Medicine was titled "Glutamine, a life-sav
272 rticle introduces this special supplement of Critical Care Medicine, which describes the developments
273         Individual members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine with special interest in neonatal
274 ciety of Intensive Care Medicine, Society of Critical Care Medicine, World Federation of Societies of

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