The global need for essential emergency and critical care.
Carl Otto SchellMartin Gerdin WärnbergAnna HvarfnerAndreas HöögUlrika BakerMarkus CastegrenTim BakerPublished in: Critical care (London, England) (2018)
Critical illness results in millions of deaths each year. Care for those with critical illness is often neglected due to a lack of prioritisation, co-ordination, and coverage of timely identification and basic life-saving treatments. To improve care, we propose a new focus on essential emergency and critical care (EECC)-care that all critically ill patients should receive in all hospitals in the world. Essential emergency and critical care should be part of universal health coverage, is appropriate for all countries in the world, and is intended for patients irrespective of age, gender, underlying diagnosis, medical specialty, or location in the hospital. Essential emergency and critical care is pragmatic and low-cost and has the potential to improve care and substantially reduce preventable mortality.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- public health
- affordable care act
- palliative care
- emergency department
- quality improvement
- mental health
- end stage renal disease
- pain management
- randomized controlled trial
- type diabetes
- clinical trial
- risk factors
- emergency medical
- peritoneal dialysis
- climate change
- risk assessment
- adverse drug
- patient reported outcomes
- electronic health record
- acute care