In the United States, shortages of qualified health-care professionals have created a major threat to the availability and quality of critical care services for seriously ill patients. An unprecedented, and largely unrecognized, shortage of physician intensivists in the near future will deny standard critical care services for large populations of patients with serious illnesses. If the current trend persists, shortages of these specialists, combined with the current shortages of critical care nurses, pharmacists, and respiratory therapists, will become severe by 2007 and will worsen through 2030. Numerous studies demonstrate that critical care services directed by physicians who are formally trained in critical care medicine reduce mortali...
Until relatively recently, critical illness was considered as a separate entity and the intensive ca...
Shortage of nurses on the ICU is not a new phenomenon, but has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pand...
BACKGROUND: The factors that limit primary care providers (PCPs) from intervening for adults with ev...
COMMENTARY Despite well-publicized projections of an impending and actual intensivist workforce cris...
Critical care medicine remains an integral part of inpatient care in every hospital and, with the ag...
Problem: Intensive care units (ICUs) are facing a staffing dilemma as there is a simultaneous increa...
Developments in hospital medicine combined with social and demographic changes are likely to increas...
Recently, many countries have described a growing gap between the supply and the demand of intensivi...
With an aging U.S. population and a declining physician supply, the care of critically ill patients ...
Intensive care units (ICUs) are an expensive [1-4] and growing [4,5] part of health care in develope...
The aging population and advanced medical therapies has contributed to an increased need for more on...
The physician shortage occurring in the United States is vast, and many people will not realize it i...
BACKGROUND: Intensivist shortages have led to increasing hospitalist involvement in critical care de...
The COVID-19 pandemic has shattered the illusion that healthcare resource shortages that require rat...
Intensive care medical training, whether as a primary specialty or as secondary add-on training, sho...
Until relatively recently, critical illness was considered as a separate entity and the intensive ca...
Shortage of nurses on the ICU is not a new phenomenon, but has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pand...
BACKGROUND: The factors that limit primary care providers (PCPs) from intervening for adults with ev...
COMMENTARY Despite well-publicized projections of an impending and actual intensivist workforce cris...
Critical care medicine remains an integral part of inpatient care in every hospital and, with the ag...
Problem: Intensive care units (ICUs) are facing a staffing dilemma as there is a simultaneous increa...
Developments in hospital medicine combined with social and demographic changes are likely to increas...
Recently, many countries have described a growing gap between the supply and the demand of intensivi...
With an aging U.S. population and a declining physician supply, the care of critically ill patients ...
Intensive care units (ICUs) are an expensive [1-4] and growing [4,5] part of health care in develope...
The aging population and advanced medical therapies has contributed to an increased need for more on...
The physician shortage occurring in the United States is vast, and many people will not realize it i...
BACKGROUND: Intensivist shortages have led to increasing hospitalist involvement in critical care de...
The COVID-19 pandemic has shattered the illusion that healthcare resource shortages that require rat...
Intensive care medical training, whether as a primary specialty or as secondary add-on training, sho...
Until relatively recently, critical illness was considered as a separate entity and the intensive ca...
Shortage of nurses on the ICU is not a new phenomenon, but has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pand...
BACKGROUND: The factors that limit primary care providers (PCPs) from intervening for adults with ev...