TY - JOUR
T1 - An official American Thoracic Society/American Association of Critical-Care Nurses/American College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine policy statement
T2 - The Choosing Wisely® Top 5 list in critical care medicine
AU - Choosing Wisely Taskforce
AU - Halpern, Scott D.
AU - Becker, Deborah
AU - Curtis, J. Randall
AU - Fowler, Robert
AU - Hyzy, Robert
AU - Kaplan, Lewis J.
AU - Rawat, Nishi
AU - Sessler, Curtis N.
AU - Wunsch, Hannah
AU - Kahn, Jeremy M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2014 by the American Thoracic Society.
PY - 2014/10/1
Y1 - 2014/10/1
N2 - Rationale: The high costs of health care in the United States and other developed nations are attributable, in part, to overuse of tests, treatments, and procedures that provide little to no benefit for patients. To improve the quality of care while also combating this problem of cost, the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation developed the Choosing Wisely Campaign, tasking professional societies to develop lists of the top five medical services that patients and physicians should question. Objectives: To present the Critical Care Societies Collaborative's Top 5 list in Critical Care Medicine and describe its development. Methods: Each professional society in the Collaborative nominated members to the Choosing Wisely task force, which established explicit criteria for evaluating candidate items, generated lists of items, performed literature reviews on each, and sought external input from content experts. Task force members narrowed the list to the Top 5 items using a standardized scoring system based on each item's likely overall impact and merits on the five explicit criteria. Measurements and Main Results: From an initial list of 58 unique recommendations, the task force proposed a Top 5 list that was ultimately endorsed by each Society within the Collaborative. The five recommendations are: (1) do not order diagnostic tests at regular intervals (such as every day), but rather in response to specific clinical questions; (2) do not transfuse red blood cells in hemodynamically stable, nonbleeding ICU patients with an Hb concentration greater than 7 g/dl; (3) do not use parenteral nutrition in adequately nourished critically ill patients within the first 7 days of an ICU stay; (4) do not deeply sedate mechanically ventilated patients without a specific indication and without daily attempts to lighten sedation; and (5) do not continue life support for patients at high risk for death or severely impaired functional recovery without offering patients and their families the alternative of care focused entirely on comfort. Conclusions: These five recommendations provide a starting point for clinicians and patients to make decisions leading to higher-quality, lower-cost care. Future work is needed to promote adherence to these recommendations and to develop additional ways for intensive care clinicians to take leadership in reining in health-care costs.
AB - Rationale: The high costs of health care in the United States and other developed nations are attributable, in part, to overuse of tests, treatments, and procedures that provide little to no benefit for patients. To improve the quality of care while also combating this problem of cost, the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation developed the Choosing Wisely Campaign, tasking professional societies to develop lists of the top five medical services that patients and physicians should question. Objectives: To present the Critical Care Societies Collaborative's Top 5 list in Critical Care Medicine and describe its development. Methods: Each professional society in the Collaborative nominated members to the Choosing Wisely task force, which established explicit criteria for evaluating candidate items, generated lists of items, performed literature reviews on each, and sought external input from content experts. Task force members narrowed the list to the Top 5 items using a standardized scoring system based on each item's likely overall impact and merits on the five explicit criteria. Measurements and Main Results: From an initial list of 58 unique recommendations, the task force proposed a Top 5 list that was ultimately endorsed by each Society within the Collaborative. The five recommendations are: (1) do not order diagnostic tests at regular intervals (such as every day), but rather in response to specific clinical questions; (2) do not transfuse red blood cells in hemodynamically stable, nonbleeding ICU patients with an Hb concentration greater than 7 g/dl; (3) do not use parenteral nutrition in adequately nourished critically ill patients within the first 7 days of an ICU stay; (4) do not deeply sedate mechanically ventilated patients without a specific indication and without daily attempts to lighten sedation; and (5) do not continue life support for patients at high risk for death or severely impaired functional recovery without offering patients and their families the alternative of care focused entirely on comfort. Conclusions: These five recommendations provide a starting point for clinicians and patients to make decisions leading to higher-quality, lower-cost care. Future work is needed to promote adherence to these recommendations and to develop additional ways for intensive care clinicians to take leadership in reining in health-care costs.
KW - Choosing Wisely
KW - Cost effectiveness
KW - Critical care
KW - Quality improvement
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U2 - 10.1164/rccm.201407-1317ST
DO - 10.1164/rccm.201407-1317ST
M3 - Article
C2 - 25271745
AN - SCOPUS:84914691304
SN - 1073-449X
VL - 190
SP - 818
EP - 826
JO - American Review of Respiratory Disease
JF - American Review of Respiratory Disease
IS - 7
ER -