We offer professional care to patients with various cardiopulmonary diseases. If intensive support and management is required, it may be recovered overnight after surgery or long-term surgery.
We are a leader in this field and ITU is actively researching the best way to treat patients. Our department is equipped with surgery, anesthesia and intensive care experts
Patients scheduled for selective surgery are invited to attend education day and have the opportunity to attend the hospital's pre-hospital clinic. During the day, patients will receive information on surgery and rehabilitation.
An anesthesiologist will evaluate all patients before surgery. They are satisfied with answering any questions about surgery and subsequent recovery.
Each patient in the unit is connected to a monitor that records the various observations needed to evaluate recovery. The patient can use a sedative and can support breathing through a ventilator
They may also make many injections. Rearing relatives in the intensive care unit is hard for families and caregivers take care of everything happening to the patient.
Units are very busy, sometimes even noisy, as there are so many patients taking care of them.
Each patient has a registered nurse assigned to a caregiver undergoing an important nursing training.
During the day, our "interdisciplinary team" will make multiple visits to each patient - a group of employees professionally trained in different fields to develop the best treatment plan through consultation
In addition, all patients are regularly evaluated by physical therapists, pharmacists and nutritionists.
The unit time is from 11 am to 1 pm, from 3 pm to 7:30 pm. You can provide other access methods as necessary.
Sometimes relatives may be asked to leave the bed and wait outside the clinical area. These opportunities include visits to wards, delivery between staff, ongoing care or physical therapy, or whether special attention should be paid to neighboring patients during this period.
Unfortunately, flowers and plants can not be used in intensive care units or highly dependent facilities. That is because water can still be a breeding ground for bacteria, keeping the environment free from infection is our top priority.
Despite the efforts of experts working in the intensive care unit (ITU), they are regarded as room temperature treatment rooms and we believe that many people will perform mechanical operations. This view is the result of patient report. This view is worried about hospitalization in this department, but this department stands out in the hospital environment, whether it is equipment or professional qualification, it can make the patient more recoverable. ITU is not limited to services with special facilities. One of the main problems is the aid provided through interpersonal relationships, which is guaranteed through linguistic and nonverbal communication. This setting should provide a safe and emotional support for customers and their families and provide a leadership approach to improving existing technology resources (1).
Intensive care unit (ITU) nurses need to work in environments where patients are experiencing life-threatening environments or at risk of life and are involved in complex assessment, high-intensity treatment and intervention, ongoing care And high-tech surveillance. Intensive care unit nurses trust specific knowledge, skills and experience to organize, care for patients and their families, and create a healing, humane and compassionate environment. Patient's condition is often very bad and patient support is a major role in ITU care, as patients are induced to lose consciousness or become unconscious. Therefore, the nurse must act for the patient's best interests and the best interests of the patient's advocate and confirm that the patient's family is fully aware of the care that the patient is receiving not.
Leathart observed 8 nurse interactions in the intensive care unit (ITU). The patient is hatching but is alert and able to communicate. Communication with the patient includes questions that mainly answer "yes" or "no". Seven out of eight nurses reported that it was difficult to communicate with ITU patients. More than half of the ventilatory patients who participated in the study by Lohmeier and Hoit (2003) reported no history of speech therapy, and only 5 out of 50 respondents received AAC intervention. 36 participants have reported problems or recessions in their speech and indicate the need to enhance communication intervention for the people of this group