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In this corner, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC), a Society of Critical Care Medicine and European Society of Intensive Care Medicine collaboration “committed to reducing mortality and morbidity from sepsis and septic shock worldwide.” See . And in this corner, thousands petitioning the 2018 Surviving Sepsis Campaign Bundle, asking SSC not be used for hospital-specific guidelines/protocols, government interventions, or mandated care. See . I don’t need to tell you how big a deal sepsis is. It accounts for ~15% of in-hospital deaths (JAMA). Supporters say, “The most important change is… the 3-hour and 6-hour bundles have been combined into a single āhour-1 bundleā with the explicit intention of beginning resuscitation and management immediately… [so] clinicians begin treatment immediately, especially in patients with hypotension, rather than waiting or extending resuscitation measures over a longer period.” Dissenters say the guidelines are “arbitrary, dangerousā¦ unsupported… and infantilize clinicians by prescribing a rigid set of bundles which mandate specific interventions within fixed time frames. Nonetheless, the guidelines have been adopted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services as a core measure (SEP-1). This pressures physicians to administer treatments despite their best medical judgment (e.g. fluid bolus for a patient with clinically obvious volume overload).” I don’t know the right answer but think this is an important topic for your consideration. If you are knowledgeable on the topic, please weigh in and educate us. +++ FREE RESOURCES On clinical trials and evidence: https://medgroup.biz/evidence On design controls, DHFs, FMEA: https://medgroup.biz/design-control On your strategic exit: https://medgroup.biz/exit +++ Make it a great week. Joe Hage P.S. Hey, whoās cominā to San Diego for MDTX in October? https://medgroup.biz/MDTX Joe Hage Having said this (and I am far, far, far from an expert here), I’m somewhat familiar with the notion of fluid overload. My medical device marketing client ImaCor has technology that helps clinicians avoid it. In its simplest terms, if you give fluid to someone whose heart can’t use it, the extra fluid goes into the lungs which almost invariably leads to complications. So to say in a blanket statement, “if sepsis, give fluid” sounds, to my under-educated ear, a bad idea. Joe Hage Your link is 15-20 year old information and no longer a game-changer. What is needed is the ability to anticipate sepsis and intervene earlier to reduce that likelihood that full-blown sepsis ever develops. (1 of 2) Joe Hage Marty: Perhaps, but I think it more a reflection of the limitation of guidelines. It takes years before proven interventions make it into the guidelines. Guidelines are among the least valuable resources for making personalized healthcare decisions. They are usually developed through a majority vote of a committee, influence by very subjective criteria and plagued with delays. Guidelines are also diagnosis-focused rather than patient-focused. For example, do you give the same fluid treatment to a patient who is pulmonary edema as well as sepsis? Personally, I consider the guideline process (as it is typically developed) as an obstacle to personalized healthcare. Graham Nichol Clinicians continue to disagree on the relative utility of SIRS vs SOFA vs qSOFA Graham Nichol But it is unclear if the lack of mortality difference is due to good recognition and response to sepsis, lack of effect of the intervention, or its brief duration (i.e., 6 h of a multiday hospital stay). Scott Seidewitz Robert Christensen Scott Seidewitz Graham Nichol Graham Nichol They have yielded conflicting results. The first trial was a single center trial conducted at Detroit Receiving Hospital Graham Nichol First, the marked escalation in the reported incidence likely reflects better recognition and reporting, which is due in part to increase knowledge of providers about the need to recognize sepsis, as well as targetted reimbursement of sepsis by Medicare. Luiz S. Ronda Cobb, BSME Ann Farrell I can’t imagine clinicians being forced to implement guidelines that are contraindicated for a specific patient. I also don’t believe that every physician is aware of best practices.Is there a middle ground here? Rush E. Simonson Lisa Ann Wade Rodney Chin, PhD, BSC, MA Marked as spam
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