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White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings
This White Paper has been formally accepted for support by the International Federation for Emergency Medicine (IFEM) and by the World Federation of Intensive and Critical Care (WFICC), put forth by a multi-specialty group of intensivists and emergency medicine providers from low- and low-middle-inc...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Ubiquity Press
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8570193/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34786353 http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3377 |
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author | Losonczy, Lia I. Papali, Alfred Kivlehan, Sean Calvello Hynes, Emilie J. Calderon, Georgina Laytin, Adam Moll, Vanessa Al Hazmi, Ahmed Alsabri, Mohammed Aryal, Diptesh Atua, Vincent Becker, Torben Benzoni, Nicole Dippenaar, Enrico Duneant, Edrist Girma, Biruk George, Naomi Gupta, Preeti Jaung, Michael Hollong, Bonaventure Kabongo, Diulu Kruisselbrink, Rebecca J. Lee, Dennis Maldonado, Augusto May, Jesse Osei-Ampofo, Maxwell Osman, Yasein Omer Owoo, Christian Rouhani, Shada A. Sawe, Hendry Schnorr, Daniel Shrestha, Gentle S. Sohoni, Aparajita Sultan, Menbeu Tenner, Andrea G. Yusuf, Hanan Adhikari, Neill K. Murthy, Srinvas Kissoon, Niranjan Marshall, John Khoury, Abdo Bellou, Abdelouahab Wallis, Lee Reynolds, Teri |
author_facet | Losonczy, Lia I. Papali, Alfred Kivlehan, Sean Calvello Hynes, Emilie J. Calderon, Georgina Laytin, Adam Moll, Vanessa Al Hazmi, Ahmed Alsabri, Mohammed Aryal, Diptesh Atua, Vincent Becker, Torben Benzoni, Nicole Dippenaar, Enrico Duneant, Edrist Girma, Biruk George, Naomi Gupta, Preeti Jaung, Michael Hollong, Bonaventure Kabongo, Diulu Kruisselbrink, Rebecca J. Lee, Dennis Maldonado, Augusto May, Jesse Osei-Ampofo, Maxwell Osman, Yasein Omer Owoo, Christian Rouhani, Shada A. Sawe, Hendry Schnorr, Daniel Shrestha, Gentle S. Sohoni, Aparajita Sultan, Menbeu Tenner, Andrea G. Yusuf, Hanan Adhikari, Neill K. Murthy, Srinvas Kissoon, Niranjan Marshall, John Khoury, Abdo Bellou, Abdelouahab Wallis, Lee Reynolds, Teri |
author_sort | Losonczy, Lia I. |
collection | PubMed |
description | This White Paper has been formally accepted for support by the International Federation for Emergency Medicine (IFEM) and by the World Federation of Intensive and Critical Care (WFICC), put forth by a multi-specialty group of intensivists and emergency medicine providers from low- and low-middle-income countries (LMICs) and high-income countries (HiCs) with the aim of 1) defining the current state of caring for the critically ill in low-resource settings (LRS) within LMICs and 2) highlighting policy options and recommendations for improving the system-level delivery of early critical care services in LRS. LMICs have a high burden of critical illness and worse patient outcomes than HICs, hence, the focus of this White Paper is on the care of critically ill patients in the early stages of presentation in LMIC settings. In such settings, the provision of early critical care is challenged by a fragmented health system, costs, a health care workforce with limited training, and competing healthcare priorities. Early critical care services are defined as the early interventions that support vital organ function during the initial care provided to the critically ill patient—these interventions can be performed at any point of patient contact and can be delivered across diverse settings in the healthcare system and do not necessitate specialty personnel. Currently, a single “best” care delivery model likely does not exist in LMICs given the heterogeneity in local context; therefore, objective comparisons of quality, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness between varying models are difficult to establish. While limited, there is data to suggest that caring for the critically ill may be cost effective in LMICs, contrary to a widely held belief. Drawing from locally available resources and context, strengthening early critical care services in LRS will require a multi-faceted approach, including three core pillars: education, research, and policy. Education initiatives for physicians, nurses, and allied health staff that focus on protocolized emergency response training can bridge the workforce gap in the short-term; however, each country’s current human resources must be evaluated to decide on the duration of training, who should be trained, and using what curriculum. Understanding the burden of critical Illness, best practices for resuscitation, and appropriate quality metrics for different early critical care services implementation models in LMICs are reliant upon strengthening the regional research capacity, therefore, standard documentation systems should be implemented to allow for registry use and quality improvement. Policy efforts at a local, national and international level to strengthen early critical care services should focus on funding the building blocks of early critical care services systems and promoting the right to access early critical care regardless of the patient’s geographic or financial barriers. Additionally, national and local policies describing ethical dilemmas involving the withdrawal of life-sustaining care should be developed with broad stakeholder representation based on local cultural beliefs as well as the optimization of limited resources. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8570193 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | Ubiquity Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-85701932021-11-15 White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings Losonczy, Lia I. Papali, Alfred Kivlehan, Sean Calvello Hynes, Emilie J. Calderon, Georgina Laytin, Adam Moll, Vanessa Al Hazmi, Ahmed Alsabri, Mohammed Aryal, Diptesh Atua, Vincent Becker, Torben Benzoni, Nicole Dippenaar, Enrico Duneant, Edrist Girma, Biruk George, Naomi Gupta, Preeti Jaung, Michael Hollong, Bonaventure Kabongo, Diulu Kruisselbrink, Rebecca J. Lee, Dennis Maldonado, Augusto May, Jesse Osei-Ampofo, Maxwell Osman, Yasein Omer Owoo, Christian Rouhani, Shada A. Sawe, Hendry Schnorr, Daniel Shrestha, Gentle S. Sohoni, Aparajita Sultan, Menbeu Tenner, Andrea G. Yusuf, Hanan Adhikari, Neill K. Murthy, Srinvas Kissoon, Niranjan Marshall, John Khoury, Abdo Bellou, Abdelouahab Wallis, Lee Reynolds, Teri Ann Glob Health Expert Consensus Document This White Paper has been formally accepted for support by the International Federation for Emergency Medicine (IFEM) and by the World Federation of Intensive and Critical Care (WFICC), put forth by a multi-specialty group of intensivists and emergency medicine providers from low- and low-middle-income countries (LMICs) and high-income countries (HiCs) with the aim of 1) defining the current state of caring for the critically ill in low-resource settings (LRS) within LMICs and 2) highlighting policy options and recommendations for improving the system-level delivery of early critical care services in LRS. LMICs have a high burden of critical illness and worse patient outcomes than HICs, hence, the focus of this White Paper is on the care of critically ill patients in the early stages of presentation in LMIC settings. In such settings, the provision of early critical care is challenged by a fragmented health system, costs, a health care workforce with limited training, and competing healthcare priorities. Early critical care services are defined as the early interventions that support vital organ function during the initial care provided to the critically ill patient—these interventions can be performed at any point of patient contact and can be delivered across diverse settings in the healthcare system and do not necessitate specialty personnel. Currently, a single “best” care delivery model likely does not exist in LMICs given the heterogeneity in local context; therefore, objective comparisons of quality, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness between varying models are difficult to establish. While limited, there is data to suggest that caring for the critically ill may be cost effective in LMICs, contrary to a widely held belief. Drawing from locally available resources and context, strengthening early critical care services in LRS will require a multi-faceted approach, including three core pillars: education, research, and policy. Education initiatives for physicians, nurses, and allied health staff that focus on protocolized emergency response training can bridge the workforce gap in the short-term; however, each country’s current human resources must be evaluated to decide on the duration of training, who should be trained, and using what curriculum. Understanding the burden of critical Illness, best practices for resuscitation, and appropriate quality metrics for different early critical care services implementation models in LMICs are reliant upon strengthening the regional research capacity, therefore, standard documentation systems should be implemented to allow for registry use and quality improvement. Policy efforts at a local, national and international level to strengthen early critical care services should focus on funding the building blocks of early critical care services systems and promoting the right to access early critical care regardless of the patient’s geographic or financial barriers. Additionally, national and local policies describing ethical dilemmas involving the withdrawal of life-sustaining care should be developed with broad stakeholder representation based on local cultural beliefs as well as the optimization of limited resources. Ubiquity Press 2021-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8570193/ /pubmed/34786353 http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3377 Text en Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. |
spellingShingle | Expert Consensus Document Losonczy, Lia I. Papali, Alfred Kivlehan, Sean Calvello Hynes, Emilie J. Calderon, Georgina Laytin, Adam Moll, Vanessa Al Hazmi, Ahmed Alsabri, Mohammed Aryal, Diptesh Atua, Vincent Becker, Torben Benzoni, Nicole Dippenaar, Enrico Duneant, Edrist Girma, Biruk George, Naomi Gupta, Preeti Jaung, Michael Hollong, Bonaventure Kabongo, Diulu Kruisselbrink, Rebecca J. Lee, Dennis Maldonado, Augusto May, Jesse Osei-Ampofo, Maxwell Osman, Yasein Omer Owoo, Christian Rouhani, Shada A. Sawe, Hendry Schnorr, Daniel Shrestha, Gentle S. Sohoni, Aparajita Sultan, Menbeu Tenner, Andrea G. Yusuf, Hanan Adhikari, Neill K. Murthy, Srinvas Kissoon, Niranjan Marshall, John Khoury, Abdo Bellou, Abdelouahab Wallis, Lee Reynolds, Teri White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings |
title | White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings |
title_full | White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings |
title_fullStr | White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings |
title_full_unstemmed | White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings |
title_short | White Paper on Early Critical Care Services in Low Resource Settings |
title_sort | white paper on early critical care services in low resource settings |
topic | Expert Consensus Document |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8570193/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34786353 http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3377 |
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