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Intensive Care Aftercare
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Intensive Care Aftercare. R. D. Griffiths, C. Jones; Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd, PO Box 382, Halley Court, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP, United Kingdom; 19.98; 155x 233 mm; pp. 170; ISBN: 0 7506 4983 6.
This is a 170-page, 15-chapter, 16-author (including the editors) soft-cover British book about aftercare of intensive care patients written since 2000 and published in 2002. The (medical and nursing) editors are members of the Intensive Care Research Group at the Whiston Hospital and th...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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By Monday night, there was only one bed for intensive care in the whole North-west
The Independent - London
; HOSPITALS IN the North-west of England and London were left with no spare intensive care beds yesterday and staff were "at breaking point" after having to move seriously ill patients, doctors said. At one point patients in the capital were facing transfers to as far away as Yorkshire and Somerset
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Information pool may help save Ulster lives; Intensive care units benefiting from national database.(News)
The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland)
; Yesterday the News Letter reported on the innovations which have placed the Royal Victoria Hospital at the forefront of modern technology. Today LINDSAY ...
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Bizarre delusions. Awful dreams. Why IS intensive care a living nightmare for so many patients? Good Health.
The Daily Mail (London, England)
; Byline: JO CARLOWE WHEN kidney patient Stephen Sweeney was in intensive care he became convinced that the nurses were trying to murder him. 'I thought they were gassing me through the tube in my nose, so I fought like hell.' For three days, Stephen, 85, a retired chauffeur, experienced a series of
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Extra days `would cut intensive care deaths'.(News)
The Independent (London, England)
; THE DEATHS of more than a third of patients transferred out of hospital intensive care units could be prevented if the most seriously ill were allowed to stay for an extra two days, doctors say. A shortage of beds and trained nurses in IC means patients are often moved too early. An extra 48 hours
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Extra days `would cut intensive care deaths'
The Independent - London
; THE DEATHS of more than a third of patients transferred out of hospital intensive care units could be prevented if the most seriously ill were allowed to stay for an extra two days, doctors say. A shortage of beds and trained nurses in IC means patients are often moved too early. An extra 48 hours
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