| Literature DB >> 28816063 |
Eric Bonnefoy-Cudraz1, Hector Bueno2, Gianni Casella3, Elia De Maria4, Donna Fitzsimons5, Sigrun Halvorsen6, Christian Hassager7, Zaza Iakobishvili8, Ahmed Magdy9, Toomas Marandi10, Jorge Mimoso11, Alexander Parkhomenko12, Susana Price13, Richard Rokyta14, Francois Roubille15, Pranas Serpytis16, Avi Shimony17, Janina Stepinska18, Diana Tint19, Elina Trendafilova20, Marco Tubaro21, Christiaan Vrints22, David Walker23, Doron Zahger24, Endre Zima25, Robert Zukermann26, Maddalena Lettino27.
Abstract
Acute cardiovascular care has progressed considerably since the last position paper was published 10 years ago. It is now a well-defined, complex field with demanding multidisciplinary teamworking. The Acute Cardiovascular Care Association has provided this update of the 2005 position paper on acute cardiovascular care organisation, using a multinational working group. The patient population has changed, and intensive cardiovascular care units now manage a large range of conditions from those simply requiring specialised monitoring, to critical cardiovascular diseases with associated multi-organ failure. To describe better intensive cardiovascular care units case mix, acuity of care has been divided into three levels, and then defining intensive cardiovascular care unit functional organisation. For each level of intensive cardiovascular care unit, this document presents the aims of the units, the recommended management structure, the optimal number of staff, the need for specially trained cardiologists and cardiovascular nurses, the desired equipment and architecture, and the interaction with other departments in the hospital and other intensive cardiovascular care units in the region/area. This update emphasises cardiologist training, referring to the recently updated Acute Cardiovascular Care Association core curriculum on acute cardiovascular care. The training of nurses in acute cardiovascular care is additionally addressed. Intensive cardiovascular care unit expertise is not limited to within the unit's geographical boundaries, extending to different specialties and subspecialties of cardiology and other specialties in order to optimally manage the wide scope of acute cardiovascular conditions in frequently highly complex patients. This position paper therefore addresses the need for the inclusion of acute cardiac care and intensive cardiovascular care units within a hospital network, linking university medical centres, large community hospitals, and smaller hospitals with more limited capabilities.Entities:
Keywords: Acute cardiovascular care; ICCU; intensive cardiovascular care units
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28816063 DOI: 10.1177/2048872617724269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care ISSN: 2048-8726