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Critical Care
What kinds of illness and injury usually require critical care? What is the difference between critical care and emergency medicine? What is an intensivist? How does my family physician fit into the team? What resources are available when facing end-of-life (EOL) decisions? How can I obtain copies of living wills and other documents? Critical care is the multiprofessional healthcare specialty that cares for patients with acute, life-threatening illness or injury. Nearly 80 percent of all Americans will experience a critical illness or injury, either as the patient, family member or friend of a patient. Critical care can be provided wherever life is threatened - at the scene of an accident, in an ambulance or medivac helicopter helicopter, in a hospital trauma center or emergency room, or in the operating room. Most critical care today, however, is delivered in highly specialized intensive care units and trauma centers. Critical care is provided by multiprofessional teams of highly experienced and professional physicians, nurses, respiratory care technicians, pharmacists and other allied health professionals who use their unique expertise, ability to interpret important therapeutic information, access to highly sophisticated equipment and the services of support personnel to provide care that leads to the best outcome for the patient. Patients are rarely admitted directly to the critical care unit. Rather, they are usually admitted from the emergency room, trauma center or surgical area where they are first given care and stabilized. The continuum of critical care begins at the moment of illness or injury and continues throughout the patient's hospitalization, treatment and subsequent recovery. What kinds of illness and injury usually require critical care? Typical examples of critical illness include heart attack, poisoning, pneumonia, surgical complications, premature birth, and stroke. Critical care also includes trauma care - care of the severely injured - whether due to an automobile accident, gunshot or stabbing wounds, a fall, burns, or an industrial accident. What is the difference between critical care and emergency medicine? Page Top The Society provides resources that are relevant to end-of-life decisions to assist critical care providers, patients and their families during these difficult situations. We encourage you to ensure that your own wishes are adequately documented in the advent that you are not able to personally direct your own care. How can I obtain copies of living wills and other documents? Your local hospital and personal physician is likely to have advance directives, living wills and other documents available. Page Top Information obtained from National Institute of Health
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