2 resultados para Transferência de carga
Resumo:
Os autores analisaram retrospectivamente os processos das crianças enviadas dos Países Africanos de Língua Oficial Portuguesa (PALOP's) para o Departamento de Cirurgia do Hospital de Dona Esteffinia (H.D.E.), ao abrigo dos Acordos de Cooperação na área da Saúde, durante o período de Janeiro de 1989 a Janeiro de 1997. Foram efectuadas 108 transferências: 17 de Angola, 49 de Cabo Verde, 26 da Guiné-Bissau e 16 de S. Tomé e Príncipe, nenhuma da República Popular de Moçambique; a que corresponderam 185 internamentos. A reflexão sobre os resultados e o percurso destes doentes, leva os Autores a propor modificações àcerca do desiderato do processo, nomeadamente na selecção e celeridade nas transferências, assim como no processo assistencia1 hospitaiar, substituindo os internamentos prolongados por tratamento em ambulatório apoiado, sempre que possível, e/ou deslocação paritária de equipas cirúrgicas, em que os custos financeiros e humanos sejam mais rentáveis e os resultados obtidos optimizados.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: Mortality after ICU discharge accounts for approx. 20-30% of deaths. We examined whether post-ICU discharge mortality is associated with the presence and severity of organ dysfunction/failure just before ICU discharge. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The study used the database of the EURICUS-II study, with a total of 4,621 patients, including 2,958 discharged alive to the general wards (post-ICU mortality 8.6%). Over a 4-month period we collected clinical and demographic characteristics, including the Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II), Nine Equivalents of Nursing Manpower Use Score, and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score. RESULTS: Those who died in the hospital after ICU discharge had a higher SAPS II score, were more frequently nonoperative, admitted from the ward, and had stayed longer in the ICU. Their degree of organ dysfunction/failure was higher (admission, maximum, and delta SOFA scores). They required more nursing workload resources while in the ICU. Both the amount of organ dysfunction/failure (especially cardiovascular, neurological, renal, and respiratory) and the amount of nursing workload that they required on the day before discharge were higher. The presence of residual CNS and renal dysfunction/failure were especially prognostic factors at ICU discharge. Multivariate analysis showed only predischarge organ dysfunction/failure to be important; thus the increased use of nursing workload resources before discharge probably reflects only the underlying organ dysfunction/failure. CONCLUSIONS: It is better to delay the discharge of a patient with organ dysfunction/failure from the ICU, unless adequate monitoring and therapeutic resources are available in the ward.