par Azoulay, Elie;Dos Santos, Claudia;Ely, Eugene Wesley;Hall, Jesse Booth;Halpern, Scott S.D.;Hart, Nicholas;Hopkins, Ramona R.O.;Iwashyna, Theodore;Jaber, Samir;Latronico, Nicola;Mehta, Sangeeta;Vincent, Jean Louis ;Needham, Dale D.M.;Nelson, Judith;Puntillo, Kathleen K.A.;Quintel, Michael;Rowan, Kathy;Rubenfeld, Gordon;Van den Berghe, Greet;van der Hoeven, Johannes Gerardus;Wunsch, Hannah;Herridge, Margaret;Angus, Derek;Arabi, Yaseen M.;Brochard, Laurent;Brett, Stephen;Citerio, Giuseppe;Cook, Deborah;Curtis, Jared Randall
Référence Critical care, 21, 1, 296
Publication Publié, 2017-12
Référence Critical care, 21, 1, 296
Publication Publié, 2017-12
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : | In this review, we seek to highlight how critical illness and critical care affect longer-term outcomes, to underline the contribution of ICU delirium to cognitive dysfunction several months after ICU discharge, to give new insights into ICU acquired weakness, to emphasize the importance of value-based healthcare, and to delineate the elements of family-centered care. This consensus of 29 also provides a perspective and a research agenda about post-ICU recovery. |