TY - JOUR
T1 - Regionalization of Critical Care in the United States
T2 - Current State and Proposed Framework from the Academic Leaders in Critical Care Medicine Task Force of the Society of Critical Care Medicine
AU - Academic Leaders in Critical Care Medicine Task Force of the Society of Critical Care Medicine
AU - Leung, Sharon
AU - Pastores, Stephen M.
AU - Oropello, John M.
AU - Lilly, Craig M.
AU - Galvagno, Samuel M.
AU - Badjatia, Neeraj
AU - Jacobi, Judith
AU - Herr, Daniel L.
AU - Oliveira, Jason David
AU - Angus, Derek C.
AU - Baker, Andrew
AU - Beilman, Gregory
AU - Brown, Daniel R.
AU - Buchman, Timothy S.
AU - Christman, John W.
AU - Cobb, J. Perren
AU - Coopersmith, Craig M.
AU - D'Agostino, Rhonda
AU - Diaz-Gomez, Jose
AU - Doig, Christopher
AU - Farmer, J. Christopher
AU - Gasperino, James
AU - Gregg, Sara R.
AU - Halpern, Neil A.
AU - Kaiser, Eric
AU - Khan, Roozehra A.
AU - Kapu, April N.
AU - Khouli, Hassan
AU - Layon, A. Joseph
AU - Kohli-Seth, Roopa
AU - Laussen, Peter
AU - Marinaro, Jon
AU - Masur, Henry
AU - Mehta, Gargi
AU - Melander, Sheila
AU - Moore, Jason
AU - Nates, Joseph L.
AU - Popovich, Marc
AU - Price, Kristen
AU - Puri, Nitin
AU - Rahmanian, Marjan
AU - Sessler, Curtis
AU - Stoltzfus, Daniel P.
AU - Wood, Kenneth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2021 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2022/1/1
Y1 - 2022/1/1
N2 - OBJECTIVES: The Society of Critical Care Medicine convened its Academic Leaders in Critical Care Medicine taskforce on February 22, 2016, during the 45th Critical Care Congress to develop a series of consensus papers with toolkits for advancing critical care organizations in North America. The goal of this article is to propose a framework based on the expert opinions of critical care organization leaders and their responses to a survey, for current and future critical care organizations, and their leadership in the health system to design and implement successful regionalization for critical care in their regions. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SELECTION: Members of the workgroup convened monthly via teleconference with the following objectives: to 1) develop and analyze a regionalization survey tool for 23 identified critical care organizations in the United States, 2) assemble relevant medical literature accessed using Medline search, 3) use a consensus of expert opinions to propose the framework, and 4) create groups to write the subsections and assemble the final product. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: The most prevalent challenges for regionalization in critical care organizations remain a lack of a strong central authority to regulate and manage the system as well as a lack of necessary infrastructure, as described more than a decade ago. We provide a framework and outline a nontechnical approach that the health system and their critical care medicine leadership can adopt after considering their own structure, complexity, business operations, culture, and the relationships among their individual hospitals. Transforming the current state of regionalization into a coordinated, accountable system requires a critical assessment of administrative and clinical challenges and barriers. Systems thinking, business planning and control, and essential infrastructure development are critical for assisting critical care organizations. CONCLUSIONS: Under the value-based paradigm, the goals are operational efficiency and patient outcomes. Health systems that can align strategy and operations to assist the referral hospitals with implementing regionalization will be better positioned to regionalize critical care effectively.
AB - OBJECTIVES: The Society of Critical Care Medicine convened its Academic Leaders in Critical Care Medicine taskforce on February 22, 2016, during the 45th Critical Care Congress to develop a series of consensus papers with toolkits for advancing critical care organizations in North America. The goal of this article is to propose a framework based on the expert opinions of critical care organization leaders and their responses to a survey, for current and future critical care organizations, and their leadership in the health system to design and implement successful regionalization for critical care in their regions. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SELECTION: Members of the workgroup convened monthly via teleconference with the following objectives: to 1) develop and analyze a regionalization survey tool for 23 identified critical care organizations in the United States, 2) assemble relevant medical literature accessed using Medline search, 3) use a consensus of expert opinions to propose the framework, and 4) create groups to write the subsections and assemble the final product. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: The most prevalent challenges for regionalization in critical care organizations remain a lack of a strong central authority to regulate and manage the system as well as a lack of necessary infrastructure, as described more than a decade ago. We provide a framework and outline a nontechnical approach that the health system and their critical care medicine leadership can adopt after considering their own structure, complexity, business operations, culture, and the relationships among their individual hospitals. Transforming the current state of regionalization into a coordinated, accountable system requires a critical assessment of administrative and clinical challenges and barriers. Systems thinking, business planning and control, and essential infrastructure development are critical for assisting critical care organizations. CONCLUSIONS: Under the value-based paradigm, the goals are operational efficiency and patient outcomes. Health systems that can align strategy and operations to assist the referral hospitals with implementing regionalization will be better positioned to regionalize critical care effectively.
KW - Access center
KW - Business plan
KW - Critical care
KW - Critical care organization
KW - Interhospital transfers
KW - Regionalization
KW - Telemedicine
KW - Value-based care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85122284841&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/CCM.0000000000005147
DO - 10.1097/CCM.0000000000005147
M3 - Article
C2 - 34259453
AN - SCOPUS:85122284841
SN - 0090-3493
VL - 50
SP - 37
EP - 49
JO - Critical Care Medicine
JF - Critical Care Medicine
IS - 1
ER -