Critical care clinics
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Family members of patients admitted to intensive care units often experience psychological distress, including depression, anxiety, and trauma symptoms, known as post-intensive care syndrome-family (PICS-F), due to the stress from having a critically ill loved one and resultant caregiver burden. Awareness of this syndrome is needed, as are prevention and management strategies, to improve outcomes.
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This review explores the financial consequences that survivors of critical illness often face following hospitalization in an intensive care unit (ICU). As part of the "post-intensive care syndrome" (PICS), these survivors often experience, in addition to physical and emotional challenges of PICS, major financial burdens resulting from their prolonged ICU treatments. The escalating costs of ICU care, coupled with the potential long-term effects on survivors' ability to work and maintain financial stability, have brought financial toxicity to the forefront of health care discussions. The current review examines the causes and consequences of financial toxicity.
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Critical care clinics · Jan 2025
ReviewPediatric Post-Intensive Care Syndrome and Current Therapeutic Options.
Post-intensive care syndrome (PICS) impacts most pediatric critical care survivors. PICS spans physical, cognitive, emotional, and social health domains and is increasingly recognized in survivorship literature. Children pose unique challenges in identifying and treating PICS given the inherent population heterogeneity in pediatric samples with biological differences across ages and neurodevelopmental stages, unique disease pathophysiology, strong environmental influences on disease and recovery, and lack of standardized measurements to identify morbidities or track response to intervention. Emerging literature and the recent development of specialized multidisciplinary clinics highlight opportunities for intervention across PICS domains in inpatient and outpatient settings.
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Patients and their caregivers navigate multiple transitions of care across the health system as they recover from their critical illness. Current research supports the development of integrated models of care to improve patient outcomes after critical illness. Future research to ensure the development of integrated models across different regions and to understand the optimal mode of delivery of these is required.
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Critical care clinics · Jan 2025
ReviewHealth Equity in the Care of Adult Critical Illness Survivors.
There is evidence that people who fare worse in recovery do so, not only because of their illness, but also because of social and structural determinants. For example, food insecurity and poor nutrition, unemployment, poverty, social isolation and loneliness, limited social support, and poor access to medical care represent marked obstacles to recovery. Those who experience social or structural disadvantage have a poor start to their critical illness journey and are more vulnerable to adverse material conditions that contribute to and worsen their health outcomes.