The management of COVID-19 has evolved through the course of the pandemic to now include options for outpatients, inpatients with life-threatening critical illness, and everyone in between. The goals of therapy include preventing disease progression and preventing worsening disease in those admitted to the hospital, with the hopes of preserving resources and improving patient outcomes. The Infectious Diseases Society of America and the National Institutes of Health have issued guidelines on treating COVID-19, which the authors review here.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAny survivor among the millions of patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) for critical illness each year is susceptible to persistent health problems that continue after discharge and may lead to post-intensive care syndrome (PICS), defined as new or worsening dysfunction from physical impairment, cognitive impairment, or emotional impairment, or a combination. Considering the increased rates of ICU survival and the growing elderly population more likely to utilize ICU resources, critical care practitioners have broadened their focus on outcomes and care of ICU survivors to include the acute post-ICU survival period as well as months and even years after ICU discharge. This review focuses on the neuropsychiatric aspects of PICS in ICU survivors including diagnostic, screening, and treatment recommendations.
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