| Literature DB >> 29616202 |
Tina M Slusher1, Andrew W Kiragu1, Louise T Day2, Ashley R Bjorklund3, Arianna Shirk4, Colleen Johannsen5, Scott A Hagen6.
Abstract
Pediatric critical care is an important component of reducing morbidity and mortality globally. Currently, pediatric critical care in low middle-income countries (LMICs) remains in its infancy in most hospitals. The majority of hospitals lack designated intensive care units, healthcare staff trained to care for critically ill children, adequate numbers of staff, and rapid access to necessary medications, supplies and equipment. In addition, most LMICs lack pediatric critical care training programs for healthcare providers or certification procedures to accredit healthcare providers working in their pediatric intensive care units (PICU) and high dependency areas. PICU can improve the quality of pediatric care in general and, if properly organized, can effectively treat the severe complications of high burden diseases, such as diarrhea, severe malaria, and respiratory distress using low-cost interventions. Setting up a PICU in a LMIC setting requires planning, specific resources, and most importantly investment in the nursing and permanent medical staff. A thoughtful approach to developing pediatric critical care services in LMICs starts with fundamental building blocks: training healthcare professionals in skills and knowledge, selecting resource appropriate effective equipment, and having supportive leadership to provide an enabling environment for appropriate care. If these fundamentals can be built on in a sustainable manner, an appropriate critical care service will be established with the potential to significantly decrease pediatric morbidity and mortality in the context of public health goals as we reach toward the sustainable development goals.Entities:
Keywords: low middle-income country; low resource settings; partnership practice; pediatric critical care; pediatric intensive care
Year: 2018 PMID: 29616202 PMCID: PMC5864848 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2018.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Obstacles to establishing critical care nursing.
Lack of hospital and nursing administration understanding of nursing role in critical care |
Lack of funding for specialized training |
Inability to provide adequate staffing for ICU nurse to patient ratios |
The traditional role of nurses in the hospital including level of education, experience in critical care, cultural norms, and comfort surrounding communication with and respectfully challenging a physician’s orders |
Inadequate compensation to encourage retention |
Allowing nurses who are fully trained and invested to be allowed to remain in the pediatric intensive care units without frequent rotation and reassignment |
The need for well-trained nurses to work as preceptors and mentors to new staff |