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外科重症监护——当前及未来的挑战?

Surgical intensive care - current and future challenges?

作者信息

Rohrig Stefan Alfred Hubertus, Lance Marcus D, Faisal Malmstrom M

机构信息

Department of Anesthesiology, ICU & Perioperative Medicine, Hamad Medical Corporation, Doha, Qatar.

出版信息

Qatar Med J. 2020 Jan 13;2019(2):3. doi: 10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.3. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Bjorn Ibsen, an anesthetist who pioneered positive pressure ventilation as a treatment option during the Copenhagen polio epidemic of 1952, set up the first Intensive Care Unit (ICU) in Europe in 1953. He managed polio patients on positive pressure ventilation together with physicians and physiologists in a dedicated ward, where one nurse was assigned to each patient. In that sense Ibsen is more or less the father of intensive care medicine as a specialty and also an advocate of the one-to-one nursing ratio for critically ill patients. Nowadays, the Surgical Intensive Care Unit (SICU) offers critical care treatment to unstable, severely, or potentially severely ill patients in the perioperative setting, who have life-threatening conditions and require comprehensive care, constant monitoring, and possible emergency interventions. Hence there is one very specific challenge in the surgical setting: the intensivist has to manage the patient flow starting from admission to the hospital through to the operating theater, in the SICU, and postoperatively for the discharge to the ward. In other words, the planning of the resources (most frequently availability of beds) has to be optimized to prevent cancellations of elective surgical procedures but also to facilitate other emergency admissions. SICU intensivists take the role of arbitrators between surgical demand and patient's interests. This means they supervise the safety, efficacy, and workability of the process with respect to all stakeholders. This notion was reported in 2007 when Stawicki and co-workers performed a small prospective study concluding that it appears safe if the dedicated intensivist takes over the role of the last arbitrator supported by a multidisciplinary team. However, demographic changes in many countries during the last few decades have given rise to populations which are more elderly and sicker than before. This impacts on the healthcare system in general but on the intensivist and the ICU team too. In addition, in a society with an increased life expectancy, the balance between treatable disease, outcome, and utilization of resources must be maintained. This fact gains even more importance as patients and their families claim "high end" treatment. Such a demand is reflected looking at the developments that have taken place over the last 25 years. Mainly, the focus of intensive care medicine was on technical support or even replacement of failing organ systems such as the lungs, the heart, or the kidneys by veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO), veno-arterial ECMO (VA-ECMO), and continuous veno-venous hemofiltration (CVVH) respectively. This means "technical care" became a core capability and expectation of critical care medicine. In parallel, medical treatment became more standardized. For example, lung protective ventilation strategies, early enteral feeding, and daily sedation vacation are part of modern protocols. As a consequence, ventilator time has been reduced and patients therefore develop delirium less frequently. These measures, beside others, are implemented in care bundles to improve the quality of care of patients by the whole ICU team. The importance of specialty trained teams was already pointed out 35 years ago when Li et al., demonstrated in a study performed in a community hospital that the mortality was decreased if an ICU was managed 24/7 by an on-site physician. The association of improved outcomes and presence of a critical care trained physician (intensivist) has been shown in several studies since that time. A modern multidisciplinary critical care team consists at least of an intensivist, ICU nurse, pharmacist, respiratory therapist, physiotherapist, and the primary team physician. Based on clinical needs, the team can be supplemented by oncologists, cardiologists, or other specialties. Again, this approach is supported by research: a recent retrospective cohort study from the California Hospital Assessment and Reporting Taskforce (CHART) on 60,330 patients confirmed the association between improved patient outcome and such a multidisciplinary team. If such an intensive care team makes a difference, why do not all patients at risk receive advanced ICU-care? It was already demonstrated by Esteban et al., in a prospective study that patients with severe sepsis had a mortality rate of 26% when not admitted to an ICU in comparison to 11% when they were admitted to an ICU. Meanwhile, we know that early referral is particularly important, because for ischemic diseases the timing appears to make a difference in terms of full recovery. So, the following questions arise: Should intensive care be rolled out to each ward and physical admission to an ICU or be restricted to special cases only? For this purpose, the so-called "Rapid Response Teams" (RRT) or "Medical Emergency Team" (MET), which essentially are a form of an ICU outreach team, were implemented. The name, composition, or exact role of such team varies from institution to institution and country to country. Alternatively, should all ward staff be educated to recognize sick patients earlier for a timely transfer to a dedicated area? This would mean that ICU-care would be introduced in the ward. A first attempt to answer this question, whether to deploy critical care resources to deteriorating patients outside the ICU 24/7, was given by Churpek et al. The success of the rapid response teams could be related to decreased rates of cardiac arrest outside the ICU setting and in-hospital mortality. Interestingly, an analysis of the registry database of the RRT calls in this study showed that the lowest frequency of calls occurred between 1:00 AM to 6:59 AM time period. In contrast, the mortality was highest around 7 AM and lowest during noon hour. This indicates that not simply the availability of such a team makes a difference but also the alertness of the ward-teams is of high importance to identify deteriorating patients in a timely manner. Essentially, this would necessitate ward staff being trained to provide a higher level of care enabling them to better recognize when patients become sicker to avoid a delayed call to the ICU. Alternatively, a system in which the intensivist plays a major role in daily ward rounds could be beneficial. So, the ward doctor should become an intensivist. However, the latter means the ICU is rolled out across the whole hospital which would consume a huge amount of resources. Another option would be 24/7 remote monitoring of patients at risk that notifies the intensivist or RRT in case of need. The infrastructure, technology, and manpower to put this in place also has associated costs. As the demand for ICU care will rise further in the future, intensivists will play an even more important role in the healthcare system that itself is under enormous economic pressure to ensure the best quality of care for critically ill patients. Besides excellent knowledge and hard skills, intensivists need to be team players, communicators, facilitators, and arbitrators to achieve the best results in collaboration with all involved in patient treatment.

摘要

比约恩·易卜生是一位麻醉师,他在1952年哥本哈根小儿麻痹症疫情期间率先将正压通气作为一种治疗选择,并于1953年在欧洲设立了首个重症监护病房(ICU)。他与医生和生理学家在一个专门的病房里,对使用正压通气的小儿麻痹症患者进行治疗,每个患者都配有一名护士。从这个意义上说,易卜生或多或少是重症监护医学这一专业的奠基人,也是重症患者一对一护理比例的倡导者。如今,外科重症监护病房(SICU)为围手术期不稳定、病情严重或可能病情严重的患者提供重症监护治疗,这些患者患有危及生命的疾病,需要全面护理、持续监测和可能的紧急干预。因此,在外科环境中有一个非常特殊的挑战:重症监护医生必须管理患者从入院到医院、进入手术室、在SICU以及术后出院到病房的整个流程。换句话说,必须优化资源规划(最常见的是床位可用性),以防止择期手术取消,同时便于其他紧急入院。SICU重症监护医生在手术需求和患者利益之间扮演仲裁者的角色。这意味着他们要监督该流程对所有利益相关者而言的安全性、有效性和可操作性。2007年,斯塔维茨基及其同事进行了一项小型前瞻性研究,得出结论:如果有专门的重症监护医生在多学科团队的支持下担任最后的仲裁者角色,似乎是安全的,这一观点得到了报道。然而,在过去几十年里,许多国家的人口结构变化导致人口比以前更年长、病情更重。这总体上对医疗保健系统产生影响,对重症监护医生和ICU团队也产生影响。此外,在一个预期寿命增加的社会中,必须维持可治疗疾病、治疗结果和资源利用之间的平衡。随着患者及其家属要求“高端”治疗,这一事实变得更加重要。这种需求从过去25年发生的发展情况中可见一斑。主要地,重症监护医学的重点在于技术支持,甚至通过静脉 - 静脉体外膜肺氧合(VV - ECMO)、静脉 - 动脉体外膜肺氧合(VA - ECMO)和持续静脉 - 静脉血液滤过(CVVH)分别替代肺、心脏或肾脏等功能衰竭的器官系统。这意味着“技术护理”成为重症监护医学的核心能力和期望。与此同时,医疗治疗变得更加标准化。例如,肺保护性通气策略、早期肠内喂养和每日镇静中断是现代方案的一部分。结果,通气时间减少,患者因此更少发生谵妄。除其他措施外,这些措施被纳入护理套餐中,以提高整个ICU团队对患者的护理质量。35年前,李等人在一家社区医院进行的一项研究中指出了专业培训团队的重要性,该研究表明,如果ICU由一名现场医生全天候管理,死亡率会降低。从那时起,多项研究表明了改善的治疗结果与有重症监护培训的医生(重症监护医生)的存在之间的关联。一个现代的多学科重症监护团队至少由一名重症监护医生、ICU护士、药剂师、呼吸治疗师、物理治疗师和初级团队医生组成。根据临床需求,该团队可以由肿瘤学家、心脏病学家或其他专科医生补充。同样,这种方法得到了研究的支持:加利福尼亚医院评估和报告工作组(CHART)最近对60330名患者进行的一项回顾性队列研究证实了改善的患者治疗结果与这样一个多学科团队之间的关联。如果这样的重症监护团队能产生影响,为什么不是所有有风险的患者都能接受先进的ICU护理呢?埃斯特班等人在一项前瞻性研究中已经表明,严重脓毒症患者未入住ICU时的死亡率为26%,而入住ICU时为11%。与此同时,我们知道早期转诊特别重要,因为对于缺血性疾病,时机似乎对完全康复有影响。那么,就会出现以下问题:重症监护应该推广到每个病房并实际入住ICU,还是仅限制在特殊病例?为此,实施了所谓的“快速反应团队”(RRT)或“医疗紧急团队”(MET),它们本质上是ICU外展团队的一种形式。这种团队的名称、组成或确切角色因机构和国家而异。或者,是否应该对所有病房工作人员进行培训,以便更早地识别病情严重的患者,以便及时转到专门区域?这将意味着在病房引入ICU护理。丘尔佩克等人首次尝试回答这个问题,即是否要全天候为ICU外病情恶化的患者部署重症监护资源。快速反应团队的成功可能与ICU外心脏骤停率和院内死亡率的降低有关。有趣的是,对该研究中RRT呼叫登记数据库的分析表明,呼叫频率最低的时间段是凌晨1:00至6:59。相比之下,死亡率在早上7点左右最高,中午最低。这表明不仅仅是这样一个团队的可用性有影响,病房团队的警觉性对于及时识别病情恶化的患者也非常重要。从本质上讲,这需要病房工作人员接受培训,以提供更高水平的护理,使他们能够更好地识别患者病情何时加重,以避免延迟呼叫ICU。或者,一种让重症监护医生在日常病房查房中发挥主要作用的系统可能会有益。那么,病房医生应该成为重症监护医生。然而,后者意味着ICU要在整个医院铺开,这将消耗大量资源。另一种选择是对有风险的患者进行全天候远程监测,如有需要通知重症监护医生或RRT。实施这一措施所需的基础设施、技术和人力也有相关成本。随着未来对ICU护理的需求将进一步上升,重症监护医生在医疗保健系统中将发挥更加重要的作用,而医疗保健系统本身正面临巨大的经济压力,要确保为重症患者提供最佳护理质量。除了卓越的知识和硬技能外,重症监护医生还需要成为团队成员、沟通者、协调者和仲裁者,以便与所有参与患者治疗的人员协作取得最佳结果。

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