Articles: intensive-care-units.
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Review Meta Analysis
The effect of computerized physician order entry on medication prescription errors and clinical outcome in pediatric and intensive care: a systematic review.
Pediatric and intensive care patients are particularly at risk for medication errors. Computerized physician order entry systems could be effective in reducing medication errors and improving outcome. Effectiveness of computerized physician order entry systems has been shown in adult medical care. However, in critically ill patients and/or children, medication prescribing is a more complex process, and usefulness of computerized physician order entry systems has yet to be established. ⋯ Introduction of computerized physician order entry systems clearly reduces medication prescription errors; however, clinical benefit of computerized physician order entry systems in pediatric or ICU settings has not yet been demonstrated. The quality of the implementation process could be a decisive factor determining overall success or failure.
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J Intensive Care Med · Mar 2009
Meta AnalysisBrain injury and fever: hospital length of stay and cost outcomes.
Fever has been shown to be related to extended hospital stays in neurologically injured patients. We performed meta-analyses of the impact of fever on length of stay (LOS) in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and for total hospital length of stay, including all recent scholarship published since 1/1/1995 pertaining to thermoregulation of neurogenic fever and length of hospital stay. We also developed estimates of the financial impact on hospital costs. ⋯ For hospital LOS, g = .79, Z = 2.2, P = .0278. Mean additional ICU days = 5.7 days; mean additional hospital days = 8.5 days. We estimate that fever added an average of $17,414 in hospital cost to total hospital stays; mean $13,672 (95% Confidence Interval [CI]: $10,074, $17,270) in additional ICU costs and mean $3,742 (CI: -$1,203, $8,820) in additional routine costs.
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Critical care medicine · Oct 2008
Review Meta AnalysisIntensive care unit mortality trends in children after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: a meta-regression analysis.
There is ongoing discussion whether intensive care unit mortality has decreased over time for children after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. ⋯ There is a widely held impression that intensive care unit mortality clearly decreased in children after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. However, characteristics of intensive care unit admitted patients significantly changed over time. After correcting for this, an improvement in intensive care unit survival was less evident. More studies are needed before a true improvement in intensive care unit survival can be confirmed.
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Meta Analysis
Mothers' experiences of having a preterm infant in the neonatal care unit: a meta-synthesis.
Neonatal nurses today are challenged not only to provide the best possible developmental care for a preterm infant but also to help the mother through an uncertain motherhood toward a feeling of being a real mother for her preterm baby. An increasing interest in mothers' experiences of having a preterm baby is seen. A meta-synthesis of 14 qualitative research studies on mothers' experiences of having a preterm baby in the neonatal intensive care unit, published from 2000 onward, was conducted. ⋯ The meta-synthesis revealed five metaphors that captured the mothers' experiences. These metaphors centered on reciprocal relationships that consisted of mother-baby relationship ("from their baby to my baby"), maternal development (a striving to be a real normal mother), the turbulent neonatal environment (from foreground to background), maternal caregiving and role reclaiming strategies (from silent vigilance to advocacy), and mother-nurse relationship (from continuously answering questions through chatting to sharing of knowledge). Implications of the meta-synthesis for neonatal nursing are addressed.