Global critical care: a call to action

被引:0
作者
Ana Maria Crawford
Ananya Abate Shiferaw
Papytcho Ntambwe
Alexei Ortiz Milan
Karima Khalid
Rodrigo Rubio
Francoise Nizeyimana
Fredy Ariza
Alhassan Datti Mohammed
Tim Baker
Paulin Ruhato Banguti
Farai Madzimbamuto
机构
[1] Stanford University,Anesthesiology and Critical Care
[2] Addis Ababa University,College of Health Sciences
[3] Livingstone University Teaching Hospital,Anaesthesia and Critical Care
[4] Sir Ketumile Masire Teaching Hospital,Critical Care Medicine Physician
[5] Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences,Departamento de Anestesia
[6] Hospital ABC,Consultant Anesthesiology and Critical Care
[7] Head of Department CHUK,Anesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Fundación Valle del Lili
[8] ICESI/UNIVALLE Universities,Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care
[9] Bayero University,Department of Global Public Health
[10] Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital,Anesthesiology and Critical Care
[11] Karolinska Institutet,Anaesthesiology and Critical Care
[12] Queen Mary University of London,undefined
[13] University of Rwanda,undefined
[14] University of Botswana School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Critical Care | / 27卷
关键词
Critical care; Global health; Critical illness; Burden of illness; ICU;
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摘要
Critical care is underprioritized. A global call to action is needed to increase equitable access to care and the quality of care provided to critically ill patients. Current challenges to effective critical care in resource-constrained settings are many. Estimates of the burden of critical illness are extrapolated from common etiologies, but the true burden remains ill-defined. Measuring the burden of critical illness is epidemiologically challenging but is thought to be increasing. Resources, infrastructure, and training are inadequate. Millions die unnecessarily due to critical illness. Solutions start with the implementation of first-step, patient care fundamentals known as Essential Emergency and Critical Care. Such essential care stands to decrease critical-illness mortality, augment pandemic preparedness, decrease postoperative mortality, and decrease the need for advanced level care. The entire healthcare workforce must be trained in these fundamentals. Additionally, physician and nurse specialists trained in critical care are needed and must be retained as leaders of critical care initiatives, researchers, and teachers. Context-specific research is mandatory to ensure care is appropriate for the patient populations served, not just duplicated from high-resourced settings. Governments must increase healthcare spending and invest in capacity to treat critically ill patients. Advocacy at all levels is needed to achieve universal health coverage for critically ill patients.
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