Ensuring adequate sleep for hospitalized patients is important for reducing stress, improving healing, and decreasing episodes of delirium. The purpose of this project was to implement a Sleep Program for stable patients in the surgical intensive care unit, thereby changing sleep management practices and ensuring quality of care using an evidence-based practice approach. Improving patient satisfaction with sleep by 28 percentage points may be attributed to a standardized process of providing a healing environment for patients to sleep.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeasurement of blood volume (BV) may guide fluid and red blood cell management in critically ill patients when capillary leak from shock and fluid resuscitation makes assessment of intravascular volume difficult. This is a prospective randomized trial of critically ill surgical patients with septic shock, severe sepsis, severe respiratory failure, and/or cardiovascular collapse. The control group received fluid management based on pulmonary artery catheter parameters and red blood cell transfusions based on hematocrit values.
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