American journal of critical care : an official publication, American Association of Critical-Care Nurses
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Sepsis is a life-threatening illness that affects millions of people worldwide. Early recognition and timely treatment are essential for decreasing mortality from sepsis. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock 2021, the fifth iteration of the guidelines, was released in October 2021 and includes 93 recommendations for the management of sepsis. ⋯ Interventions aimed at improving recovery across the continuum of care should include attention to long-term outcomes. Nurses are essential in identifying patients with sepsis, administering and assessing response to treatment, supporting the patient and family, and limiting sequelae from sepsis. This article highlights the 2021 recommendations that influence nursing care for patients with sepsis.
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Repositioning patients at regular intervals is the standard of care for pressure injury prevention, yet compliance with routine repositioning schedules can be hard to achieve in busy critical care environments. Cueing technology may help improve repositioning compliance. ⋯ Visual cueing about patients' mobility needs is associated with increased compliance with the facility repositioning protocol.
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Stroke is the number one cause of preventable disability in adults in the United States. Significant advances have occurred in medications and technology supporting rapid stroke diagnosis and treatment during the past 30 years, along with blurring of the lines of what traditionally constituted nursing or medical research. Ischemic stroke is a disease of vascular insufficiency that mirrors myocardial infarction more than any other neurologic diagnosis. ⋯ I am also examining augmentation of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator treatment and stimulation of both arteriogenesis and angiogenesis with external counter-pulsation in patients with intracranial atherosclerosis. My secondary program of research focuses on methods to improve stroke systems of care, including improvement of advance practice providers' contributions to acute stroke care, use of innovative mobile stroke units, and improvement of quality core measure processes. Lessons learned along the way are highlighted, along with the value of interdisciplinary "team science" to build knowledge and enhance the care of highly vulnerable patients with acute stroke.