Title: ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE ICUs
1ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE ICUs
- Arzu TOPELI-ISKIT,MD
- Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine
- Medical Intensive Care Unit
- 22 April 2006
2ICUs 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- Guidelines for intensive care unit design, 1992
www.sccm.org Crit Care Med 199523582-8. - Recommendations on minimal requirements for
intensive care departments TASK FORCE of the
ESICM. Intensive Care Med 199723226-32. - Intensive care unit design and environmental
factors in the acquisition of infection J Hosp
Infect 200045255-62. - Guidelines on critical care services and
personnel Recommendations based on a system of
categorization of three levels of care Crit
Care Med 2003312677-83. - Guidelines for environmental infection control
in health-care facilities, 2003.
Recommendations of CDC and HICPAC. www.cdc.gov
4Physical 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
6Level 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
7Level 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
8Physical 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
9Physical 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)
10Physical 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)
11Physical 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))
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14Physical 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
15Physical 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
16Continuity
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)
18Chest 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
19Hacettepe 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)
20Team Work
21ICU team
Intensivist Director
Physicians
Nurses
Resp therapists
Clinical Pharmacist
Others
22Lancet 2000356185-9
- Workload ? occupancy nursing care (1.3 nurses /
pt) - Adjusted mortality
- Increased workload 3.1 (1.9 5.0)
23TISS-28 (Therapeutic Intervention Scoring
System-28 )
1 TISS score 10.6 min/shift
24Hacettpe 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
25Aust 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
26JAMA 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)
27Hacettepe, 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).
28Definition 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
29USA
Pulmonary
Medicine
Anestesiology
CCM (1-3 yrs)
Surgery
Pediatrics
30Europe
Medicine
Anestesiology
CCM (1-2 yrs)
Surgery
Pediatrics
31Duties of the Director
- Communication, coodination, Primary
responsibility in pt care - Responsibility in admission, discharge, triage
- Role in physical design, supplying equipments
etc. - Continuous education
32ICU 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.
33Admission 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
34ICU
Intermediary Care Unit
Ward
23-33 unnecessarily prolonged hospitalizations
35ICU 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.
36Best 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
37JAMA 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
38Why 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
39Crit Care Med 2004322191-8
- 21 decrease in ICU mortality, 10 decrease in
hospital mortality - 17 decrease in LOS (3.5 ? 2.9 days)
40Crit 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
41Hacettepe MICU, Ankara
42Crit 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
43APACHE 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.
45USA
- 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
46Europe
- 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
47Respiratory 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
48TURKEY ?
- 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
49www.dcyogunbakim.org.tr