Decision-making by intensivists around accepting patients to intensive care units is a complex area, with often high-stakes, difficult, emotive decisions being made with limited patient information, high uncertainty about outcomes and extreme pressure to make these decisions quickly. This is exacerbated by a lack of clear guidelines to help guide this difficult decision-making process, with the onus largely relying on clinical experience and judgement. In addition to uncertainty compounding decision-making at the individual clinical level, it is further complicated at the multi-speciality level for the senior doctors and surgeons referring to intensive care units. This is a systematic review of the existing literature about this decision-ma...
Non medical factors may significantly influence medical decisions in situations of great uncertainty...
Objective: To examine physicians' decision making and its determinants about admission to intensive ...
Background: Single patient- and context-related factors have been associated with admission decision...
Background: Intensive care treatment can be life-saving but is invasive and distressing for patients...
OBJECTIVES Deciding whether to admit a patient to the ICU requires considering several clinical a...
In the intensive care unit (ICU), clinicians must often make risk trade-offs on patient care. For ex...
Objectives: Deciding whether to admit a patient to the ICU requires considering several clinical and...
Referral to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is a complex medical process. The decision making involved ...
Background Intensive care treatment can be life-saving, but it is invasive and distressing for pati...
Previous studies of critical care admissions have largely compared patients that have been granted o...
Rationale, aims, and objectives Decisions about whether to refer or admit a patient to an intensive...
Treatment in an intensive care unit (ICU) can be life - saving but it can be distressing and not eve...
RATIONALE, AIMS, AND OBJECTIVES Decisions about whether to refer or admit a patient to an intensi...
Objective The use of intensive care at the end of life can be high, leading to inappropriate healthc...
Demand for intensive care unit (ICU) resources often exceeds supply, and shortages of ICU beds and s...
Non medical factors may significantly influence medical decisions in situations of great uncertainty...
Objective: To examine physicians' decision making and its determinants about admission to intensive ...
Background: Single patient- and context-related factors have been associated with admission decision...
Background: Intensive care treatment can be life-saving but is invasive and distressing for patients...
OBJECTIVES Deciding whether to admit a patient to the ICU requires considering several clinical a...
In the intensive care unit (ICU), clinicians must often make risk trade-offs on patient care. For ex...
Objectives: Deciding whether to admit a patient to the ICU requires considering several clinical and...
Referral to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is a complex medical process. The decision making involved ...
Background Intensive care treatment can be life-saving, but it is invasive and distressing for pati...
Previous studies of critical care admissions have largely compared patients that have been granted o...
Rationale, aims, and objectives Decisions about whether to refer or admit a patient to an intensive...
Treatment in an intensive care unit (ICU) can be life - saving but it can be distressing and not eve...
RATIONALE, AIMS, AND OBJECTIVES Decisions about whether to refer or admit a patient to an intensi...
Objective The use of intensive care at the end of life can be high, leading to inappropriate healthc...
Demand for intensive care unit (ICU) resources often exceeds supply, and shortages of ICU beds and s...
Non medical factors may significantly influence medical decisions in situations of great uncertainty...
Objective: To examine physicians' decision making and its determinants about admission to intensive ...
Background: Single patient- and context-related factors have been associated with admission decision...