Intensive Care Unit (ICU) quality and management tools refer to a range of strategies, technologies, and practices aimed at improving patient outcomes, operational efficiency, and safety within the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).
ICU quality tools
Quality tools include:
- Medical guidelines, including checklists (items rated as yes/no/not applicable)
- Templates for goal setting or structured communication (a more open format than checklists, templates provide the opportunity to add free text responses with items as prompts)
- Care bundles, including ABCDE(F) bundle (Assess, prevent and manage pain, Both spontaneous awakening trials and spontaneous breathing trials, Choice of analgesia and sedation, Delirium assessment, prevention and management, Early mobility and exercise, Family engagement and empowerment)
Medical scoring systems can be used to describe ICU populations and explain their different outcomes. Examples include:
Physical tools include:
ICU management tools
Severity assessment tools
Examples of severity assessment tools:
Risk stratification tools
Risk stratification tools examples:
- Early warning score such as the Modified Early Warning Score (MEWS), to predict ICU readmission, and the Pediatric early warning signs (PEWS) score
- Minimizing ICU Readmission (MIR) score, to predict patient death or ICU readmission.
- Sabadell score, which predicts hospital mortality after ICU discharge.
- Stability and Workload Index for Transfer (SWIFT) score and the Frost nomogram, to predict ICU readmission.
See also
References
- The Epimed Monitor ICU Databaseî: a cloud-based national registry for adult intensive care unit patients in Brazil. Zampieri FG, Soares M, Borges LP, Salluh JIF, Ranzani OT.Rev Bras Ter Intensiva. 2017 Oct-Dec;29(4):418-426. doi: 10.5935/0103-507X.20170062. Epub 2017 Nov 30.
- New perspectives to improve critical care benchmarking. Salluh JIF, Chiche JD, Reis CE, Soares M.Ann Intensive Care. 2018 Feb 2;8(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s13613-018-0363-0.
- How to evaluate intensive care unit performance during the COVID-19 pandemic. Zampieri FG, Soares M, Salluh JIF.Rev Bras Ter Intensiva. 2020 Jun;32(2):203-206. doi: 10.5935/0103-507x.20200040. Epub 2020 Jul 13.
References
External links