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ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE ICUs

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Title: ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE ICUs


1
ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE ICUs
  • Arzu TOPELI-ISKIT,MD
  • Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine
  • Medical Intensive Care Unit
  • 22 April 2006

2
ICUs are specialized units where intensive
monitorization and organ supportive therapies can
be applied to patients with physiologic
instability, continuously and with same
standarts, i.e., 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
and 365 days a year.
3
  • Physical Design
  1. Guidelines for intensive care unit design, 1992
    www.sccm.org Crit Care Med 199523582-8.
  2. Recommendations on minimal requirements for
    intensive care departments TASK FORCE of the
    ESICM. Intensive Care Med 199723226-32.
  3. Intensive care unit design and environmental
    factors in the acquisition of infection J Hosp
    Infect 200045255-62.
  4. Guidelines on critical care services and
    personnel Recommendations based on a system of
    categorization of three levels of care Crit
    Care Med 2003312677-83.
  5. Guidelines for environmental infection control
    in health-care facilities, 2003.
    Recommendations of CDC and HICPAC. www.cdc.gov

4
Physical Design
  • Members to be present in ICU planning
  • Medical director of the ICU
  • Director of the hospital
  • ICU chief nurse
  • Hospital architect and engineer
  • Other departments wrelated with the ICU
  • Points that have to be taken into consideration
  • Patient population
  • Admission and discharge criteria
  • ICU occupancy
  • Tha status of the other hospitals
  • Categorization according to level of care
  • Staff and visitor number
  • Necessity of the other support units

5
Level of CareGuidelines on critical care
services and personnel Recommendations based on
a system of categorization of three levels of
care Crit Care Med 2003312677-83.
  • LEVEL I Units having staff and technologic
    equipment so that every critically ill patient
    can be managed
  • LEVEL II Units managing the critically ill
    patients but not in all fields (e.g.,
    neurosurgery, transplantation, etc) and having
    protocols to transfer these patients to
    appropriate units
  • LEVEL III Units where critically ill patients
    can be stabilized but can not be fully treated
    and having protocols to transfer these patients
    to appropriate units

6
Level of Care Recommendations on minimal
requirements for intensive care departments
TASK FORCE of the ESICM. Intensive Care Med
199723226-32.
Level of Care Nurse/patient Total nurse no/bed
III 1/1 6
II 1/1.6 4
I 1/3 2
7
Level of CareRecommendations on minimal
requirements for intensive care departments
TASK FORCE of the ESICM. Intensive Care Med
199723226-32.
III II I
Total doctor no/6-8 bed 5 4 3
Min 6 bed N N R
Presence of antre in isolation rooms (2.5 m2) N R O
...
N Necessary R Required O Optional
8
Physical Design
  • SPESIFIC or GENERAL (Multi-diciplinary)
  • In intracranial bleeding, head trauma, follow up
    in the neurointensive care increases survival.
  • ICUs should be close to each other far away from
    the main hospital traffic, close to ER, OR, lab,
    radiology department and elevators
  • 5-10 of hospital beds
  • Ideal bed no 8-12

9
Physical Design
  • Beds OPEN, SEPERATE (ISOLATED ROOMS), MODULAR
    (UNITS OF A COUPLE OF BEDS)
  • Bed no Total area / 40
  • Support units (clean room, dirty room, etc) Bed
    area
  • Open system 20 m2/bed isolated rooms 25 m2/bed
  • In the open system beds should be seperated by
    2.5 m from each other
  • Central monitorization (direct veya indirect)

10
Physical Design
  • Other areas
  • Rooms for staff (director, physicians, nurses,
    secretary, others showers, meals, alarms,
    communication, etc)
  • Rooms for equipment, drugs, sinks, security...
  • Clean room (10-15 m2)
  • Dirty room (20 m2, seperate enterance and air
    conditionng, etc.)
  • Seminar room for education
  • Room for relatives (1-1.5 chair/bed room for
    talk)

11
Physical Design
  • For each bed 2 O2 (5 bar), air (5 bar) and vacum
    (500 mmHg) source lightning 16 electrical
    socket alarms
  • Water supply for dialysis
  • Clock, tv, radio
  • Beds, monitors
  • Natural lightning (window)
  • Chairs for relatives
  • Seperate enterance for staff, equipment, relative
    (seperate corridors for patient transport
  • lt 8 persons / rounds
  • Material used for walls, floor should be cleaned
    easily, absorb noise (day 45 dB(A), night 20
    dB(A))

12
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14
Physical Design - Infection
  • More infection risk in ICU patients
  • Multi-drug resistant microorganisms
  • Min 1-2/10 isolation rooms (25 m2)
  • Antre for dressing, hand wash, etc
  • Sink and bathroom
  • Open sytem 1 sink/2 beds isolated rooms 1
    sink/bed 2 sinks/each module
  • Operated by elbow, foot deep and wide enough
    easy to reach
  • Alcohol based disinfectants for each bed
  • Standarts for cleaning and disinfection

15
Physical Design - Infection
  • Appropriate air flow and conditioning
  • Positive and negative pressure rooms
  • Filtration 5 µm particulate, 99 efficient
  • Temp and humidity could be adjusted 16-27C,
    30-60, 6-15 cycles of air flow/hour
  • Dirty rooms (20 m2)
  • Seperate air flow
  • Seperate corridor for garbage

16
Continuity
17
  • 3.5 years 18 ICU 23,000 admissions
  • Adjusted mortality
  • Weekend vs. weekday admission 1.20 (1.01 1.43)
  • Night vs. dayadmision 6.89 (5.96 7.96)

18
Chest 20041261292-8
  • 7 years single center (USA) 29,000 admissions
  • Adjusted mortality
  • SICU Weekend vs. weekday 1.23 (1.03 1.48)
  • No difference in MICU and general ICU

19
Hacettepe MICU, AnkaraArzu Topeli, N. Defne
Altintas, Melda Aybar. Toraks Dergisi 20045 (Ek
1)83
  • 20 month period, single center, prospective 331
    pts hospitalized for gt24 hours
  • Adjusted mortality
  • Holiday admissions (including weekend and
    holidays) 2.0 (1.0 4.1)

20
Team Work
21
ICU team
Intensivist Director
Physicians
Nurses
Resp therapists
Clinical Pharmacist
Others
22
Lancet 2000356185-9
  • Workload ? occupancy nursing care (1.3 nurses /
    pt)
  • Adjusted mortality
  • Increased workload 3.1 (1.9 5.0)

23
TISS-28 (Therapeutic Intervention Scoring
System-28 )
1 TISS score 10.6 min/shift
24
Hacettpe MICU
  • 30.3 5.4.2006 (1 week) 9 beds
  • 100 occupancy
  • Mean TISS 28 (11-39)
  • 40 hours/shift
  • 5 nurses (4-6) /shift are required

25
Aust J Physioth 20045067-73
  • Randomized prospective study
  • Acute hypercapnic resp failure NIMV
  • 17 pts no physiotherapy Length of NIMV 6.7 days
  • 17 pts physiotherpy Length of NIMV 5.0 days

p0.03
26
JAMA 1999282267-70
  • MICU CCU
  • Clin Pharmacist rounding with ICU staff everyday,
    consultation is asked at other times
  • 66 ? in medication errors (10.4/1000 ? 3.5/1000
    pt day, plt0.001)

27
Hacettepe, MICUDeniz Yilmaz, Arzu Topeli Iskit,
Kutay Demirkan. Yogun Bakim Derg 20055 (Ek 1)
  • Seminar to the physicians was given by the
    pharmacist about blood level monitorization and
    drug application accordingly
  • Prior to education 110 (30 pts), after education
    90 (21 pts) blood level monitorization
  • Prior to education 39 (35.5) levels, After
    education 15 (16.7) levels were monitored in a
    wrong way (plt0.05).

28
Definition of an Intensivist
  • Education in the main specialty and then
    education in Critical Care Medicine
  • Spending 50 75 of his/her professional time in
    the ICU

SCCM 1992 ICM 1997
29
USA
Pulmonary
Medicine
Anestesiology
CCM (1-3 yrs)
Surgery
Pediatrics
30
Europe
Medicine
Anestesiology
CCM (1-2 yrs)
Surgery
Pediatrics
31
Duties of the Director
  • Communication, coodination, Primary
    responsibility in pt care
  • Responsibility in admission, discharge, triage
  • Role in physical design, supplying equipments
    etc.
  • Continuous education

32
ICU Admission and Discharge CriteriaCrit Care
Med 199927633
  • Critically ill pts with reversible underlying
    condition or having a reasonable life expectancy
    should be admitted.
  • Terminally ill pts or pts too good to be followed
    in a ward should not be admitted.
  • If pt becomes terminally ill after admission to
    an ICU limited/no support should be given or the
    pt should be transferred outside.

33
Admission and Discharge CriteriaCrit Care Med
199927633
  • Priority system
  • 1. priority Pt in need of full ICU care
    (MV,vasopressor treatment, etc)
  • 2. priority Pts who who will get benefit from
    ICU care (acute problems in pts with
    comorbidities)
  • 3. priority Pts with a low expectation of
    prolonged life but in need of ICU care for acut
    problems (acute problems in metastatic
    malignancy). Treatment might be limited.
  • 4. priority Pts with no indication

34
ICU
Intermediary Care Unit
Ward
23-33 unnecessarily prolonged hospitalizations
35
ICU management policies
  • Open Primary physicians are responsible from the
    pts
  • Closed Intensivist is the responsible physician.
  • Semi closed Primary physician and the
    intensivist sharing the decisions.

36
Best management system?
  • Presence of a responsible physician (director)
  • Presence of an intensivist director
  • Presence of an intensivist director closed
    system policy
  • Presence of an intensivist in the ICU 24 hrs a
    day

37
JAMA 20022882151-62
  • 26 studies
  • High density ICU care (mandatory intensivist
    consultation or closed system)
  • Low density ICU care (no intensivist or elective
    intensivist consultation)
  • Adjusted hospital mortality HD vs LD 0.71 (0.62
    - 0.82)
  • Adjusted hospital mortality HD vs LD 0.61 (0.50
    0.75)
  • Shorter ICU and hospital LOS in HD group

38
Why closed system/intensivist director?
  • Patient care is not like a standart round and
    ordering treatment, it is rather like titration.
  • ICU physician, not the primary doctor, is near
    the patient all the time.
  • Uncoordinated patient care by unnecessarily high
    amounts physicians is not good.

Safar Grenvik. Anesthesiology 1977
39
Crit Care Med 2004322191-8
  • 21 decrease in ICU mortality, 10 decrease in
    hospital mortality
  • 17 decrease in LOS (3.5 ? 2.9 days)

40
Crit Care Med 2004322311-7
OR (95 CI) p
APACHE III 1.07 (1.06 1.08) lt0.001
Transfer from another ICU 3 (1.4 6) lt0.01
Nörointensivist 0.7 (0.5 1) 0.04
41
Hacettepe MICU, Ankara
42
Crit Care Med 200533299-306
Open n200 Closed n210
APACHE II (median) 13 21
MV () 45 64
CVC () 23 47
Trach () 0 8
Unit policy - mortality Open vs. closed OR (CI) 5 (2 11) p lt0.0001
43
APACHE II(Acute Physiology and Chronic Health
Evaluation)
  • Physiological parameters
  • Lab parameters
  • GCS
  • Age
  • Chronic health status

Gerçek ölüm orani Beklenen ölüm orani
? 1
44
  • 1/31/2 of Americans spend their last year of
    life in an ICU, 1/5 of them lose their lives in
    the ICU.
  • With the presence of an intensivist director,
    54,000 lives could be saved each year in USA
    where 3.5 million pts are admitted to ICUs.

45
USA
  • 1 of national gross product for ICUs
  • 8 of hospital beds
  • Mean bed no 10-12
  • Bed occupancy 84
  • In 35 medical director
  • 1 out of 3 pts cared by an intensivist
    intensivist crisis in 2007
  • Closed system 22 (big hospitals, MICU)
  • Continuous respiratory therapist 48
  • Nurse/pt ratio 1/2
  • Presence of educated intensivists in ICUs is
    considered to be a marker for quality of health
    care

46
Europe
  • 75 medical surgical pts (general ICU)
  • 25 gt10 beds 57 6-10 beds 18 lt6 beds (UK)
  • 72 continuous physician coverage 67 medical
    director (intensivist)
  • Bed occupancy 78

47
Respiratory ICU Italy
  • RICU Units between ICU and ward (intermediary
    care units) where pts with single organ failure
    (resp failure) can be followed
  • Nurse/pt 1/2.5 1/4 continuous sufficient
    non-invasive monitorization sufficient
    experience in NIMV and intubation in case of NIMV
    failure presence of a physician 24 hrs a day
  • Results
  • 26 RICU
  • Nurse/pt 1/2 - 1/3 (36 1/4)
  • 756 pts age 68 APACHE 18 (expected mortality
    22 observed mortality 16) length of stay 12
    days
  • 96 resp failure (COPD)
  • 30 monitorization 62 MV 8 weaning
  • 73 NIMV

Confalonieri. Thorax 200156373
48
TURKEY ?
  • 1978 Society of Intensive Care
  • 1992 Turkish Thoracic Society Respiratory
    Intensive Care Working Group
  • Education of CCM subspecialty after education in
    main specialties (Medicine, Anestesiology, Pulm
    Medicine and Pediatrics) is being prepared
  • 8 March 2005 Society of Medical and Surgical
    Sciences Intensive Care Medicine

49
www.dcyogunbakim.org.tr
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