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Objectives: To determine the prevalence of the utilization of primary intensivists and primary nurses for long-stay patients in large, academic PICU and ascertain how these practices are operationalized and perceived.
Design: A cross-sectional survey.
Setting: U.S. PICUs with accredited Pediatric Critical Care Medicine fellowships.
Subjects: One senior physician and one senior nurse at each institution.
Intervention: None.
Measurements And Main Results: Separate but largely analogous questionnaires for intensivists and nurses were created using an iterative process to enhance content/face validity and readability. Sixty-seven intensivists (representing 93% of the 72 institutions with fellowship programs and their PICUs) and 59 nurses (representing 82%) responded. Twenty-four institutions utilize primary intensivists; 30 utilize primary nurses; and 13 utilize both. Most institutions use length of stay and/or other criteria (e.g., medical complexity) for eligibility. Commonly, not all patients that meet eligibility criteria receive primaries. Primary providers are overwhelmingly volunteers, and often only a fraction of providers participate. Primary intensivists at a large majority (>75%) of institutions facilitate information sharing and decision-making, attend family/team meetings, visit patients/families regularly, and are otherwise available upon request. Primary nurses at a similar majority of institutions provide consistent bedside care, facilitate information sharing, and attend family/team meetings. A large majority of respondents thought that primary intensivists increase patient/family satisfaction, reduce their stress, improve provider communication, and reduce conflict, whereas primary nurses similarly increase patient/family satisfaction. More than half of respondents shared that these practices can sometimes require effort (e.g., time and emotion), complicate decision-making, and/or reduce staffing flexibility.
Conclusions: Primary practices are potential strategies to augment rotating PICU care models and better serve the needs of long-stay and other patients. These practices are being utilized to varying extents and with some operationalization uniformity at large, academic PICUs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PCC.0000000000003181 | DOI Listing |
World J Transplant
September 2025
Department of Medicine, The John A Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i, Honolulu, HI 96813, United States.
Background: Advanced heart failure and transplant (AHFTC) teams are crucial in the management of patients in cardiogenic shock. We sought to explore the impact of AHFTC physicians on outcomes in patients receiving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support.
Aim: To determine whether outcomes differ in the care of ECMO patients when AHFTC physicians serve in a primary consultative role.
Hosp Pediatr
August 2025
Division of Newborn Medicine, Mass General Brigham, Boston, Massachusetts.
Objective: The objective of this study was to understand factors that impact family-staff relationships in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) from the perspective of staff. Staff shared: (1) general challenges that impact family-staff relationships, (2) role-specific challenges (by discipline), and (3) solutions that could help improve family-staff relationships.
Methods: We conducted this study at an urban hospital level IV NICU.
JAMA Netw Open
August 2025
Medical Intensive Care Unit, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Saint-Louis Hospital, Paris-Cité University, Paris, France, INSERM UMR1342 Institut de Recherche Saint-Louis.
Importance: Posttraumatic growth (PTG) refers to positive psychological changes following adversity, including deeper relationships and a greater appreciation for life.
Objective: To assess PTG among intensive care unit (ICU) health care professionals 4 years after the COVID-19 pandemic and explore its association with resilience, anxiety, and depression.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This cross-sectional study invited ICU health care professionals (nursing staff, medical staff [residents, interns, clinical fellows, and senior intensivists], and other professionals providing patient care) in ICUs in general or university-affiliated hospitals in France and Belgium to complete online questionnaires between March 15 and May 15, 2024.
Crit Care Med
August 2025
Department of Anesthesiology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
Objectives: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) cannulation by nonsurgeon intensivists (critical care medicine intensivists [CCM]) compared with cardiothoracic surgeons (CTS).
Design: Retrospective, single-center observational study using a noninferiority framework to evaluate outcomes across cannulating physician training backgrounds. The primary outcome was the rate of cannulation-related complications.
JMA J
July 2025
Department of Human Sciences, Faculty of Human Sciences, Osaka University of Economics, Osaka, Japan.
Introduction: Variations in intensive care unit (ICU) policies and physician characteristics influence mortality, potentially leading to regional differences in mortality rates. Previous studies have not specifically focused on septic shock or older patients and have lacked consideration of the context effect. We hypothesized that regional variability in mortality exists among older patients with septic shock and investigated factors associated with mortality.
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