I think hemodynamic stability would be a factor in whether the patient belongs in Critical Care.
Mary Draper RN BSN CCRN Quality Manager-Best Practice Support Quality Management Supervisor Office (925) 674-2045 Cell (925) 451-8792 Fax (925) 674-2373 [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Townsend, Sean, M.D. Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2013 11:32 PM To: '[email protected]' Subject: [Sepsis Groups] Where Does Severe Sepsis Belong? It's been a long time since I've had to ask this question. I used to think I knew the answer. Here it is: do all patients who meet severe sepsis criteria need to be admitted to the ICU ? Examples: 1. Pneumonia, fever, tachycardia, INR 1.5. 2. Cellulitis, leukocytosis, fever, creatinine 2.0. 3. UTI, leukocytosis, fever, lactate 3.0. Where do people put these patients in reality? What mind of monitoring do they deserve? By prevailing bundles, each gets lactate checked, blood cultures, broad spectrum antibiotics. That's it. Good enough? Good enough for the floor? Need the ICU? Why? Sean Sean R. Townsend, M.D. Vice President of Quality & Safety California Pacific Medical Center 2330 Clay Street, #301 San Francisco, CA 94115 email [email protected] office (415) 600-5770 fax (415) 600-1541 _______________________________________________ Sepsisgroups mailing list [email protected] http://lists.sepsisgroups.org/listinfo.cgi/sepsisgroups-sepsisgroups.org _______________________________________________ Sepsisgroups mailing list [email protected] http://lists.sepsisgroups.org/listinfo.cgi/sepsisgroups-sepsisgroups.org
