Articles: intensive-care-units.
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Many intensive care patients are affected by serious persistent or new physical, cognitive, psychological, and social consequences after discharge (post-ICU syndrome). This has an impact on the rest of life as well as the prognosis. To reduce or avoid these complications and structured treatment after discharge must be essential goals of intensive care medicine. ⋯ Ultimately, the treatment of intensive care patients must not end when they are discharged from the intensive care unit or hospital. Patients at risk for the very different facets of a PICS must be identified and linked to appropriate care institutions. This requires the establishment of post-ICU facilities, such as consultation hours in clinics or outpatient clinics.
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Relatives of intensive care patients make an important contribution to recovery and perform a variety of tasks. Due to the demands on the relatives and their services in the ICU and after their discharge, stressful psychological, physical, social, and financial consequences can arise or worsen. Relatives often compensate deficiencies in treatment, especially through a lack of communication and a lack of continuity of care. ⋯ Structured communication between relatives and the treatment team as well as active involvement in nursing treatments can alleviate stress symptoms and the feeling of powerlessness. Prescient discharge management for ICU patients and their relatives reduces PICS risk. Specific and comprehensive offerings of advice and support for relatives can help to perform and process the effort between everyday life and care tasks.
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Comparative Study
Behavioral pain scale may not be reliable in awake non-verbal intensive care patients: a case control study.
The evaluation of pain in patients, unable of oral communication, often relies on behavioral assessment. However, some critically ill patients, while non-verbal, are awake and have some potential for self-reporting. The objective was to compare the results of a behavioral pain assessment with self-reporting in awake, non-verbal, critically ill patients unable to use low-tech augmentative and alternative communication tools. ⋯ Behavioral pain assessment tools in non-verbal patients who are awake and not in delirium appear unreliable in estimating pain during rest. Before a behavioral assessment tool such as the BPS is used, the application of high-tech AACs should be strongly considered.