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Published byJuliana Park Modified over 9 years ago
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Practice of Critical Care in South Korea Gee Young Suh, MD Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Samsung Medical Center SungKyunKwan University School of Medicine Seoul, Korea
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Types of ICU Open vs closed –Many hospitals employ open system –Some hospitals employ closed system in selected ICU’s
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Training of ICU Physicians No formal training in critical care medicine Chief of ICU –Surgical or multidisciplinary ICU: many anesthesiologist, surgeons –Medical ICU: pulmonologist, cardiologist –Coronary care unit: cardiologist
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Formal Training Just few hours of clinical clerkship for medical students at most universities Residents –No formal guideline for training residents in critical care –In 2001, working group to form a formal guideline was established by Korean Society of Critical Care Medicine Fellows –No formal guideline –Different levels of training in different hospitals
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Key Clinical Decision Makers Intensivist –Ventilator and hemodynamic decision making –Admission and discharge decisions Attending physician –Family counseling –Treatment of specific diseases Fellow/House residents –Day-to-day care of patients
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Problems Hindering Development of Critical Care in Korea Low cost of critical care –Most hospitals: private –Medical costs: set and controlled by the government –Administrators see ICU’s as money-losing department Few true intensivists –Even active interested doctors cannot devote full time to the ICU No formal training or guideline in critical care
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Pressing Educational Needs More physicians devoted to critical care medicine are needed –Teach physicians and administrators why intensivist-directed ICU’s are important and necessary –Educate physicians interested in critical care medicine the basic skills necessary to become intensivists
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