Meeting the Challenges of Establishing Intensive Care Unit Follow-up Clinics

Am J Crit Care. 2022 Jul 1;31(4):324-328. doi: 10.4037/ajcc2022987.

Abstract

Intensive care unit follow-up clinics are becoming an increasingly widespread intervention to facilitate the physical, cognitive, psychiatric, and social rehabilitation of survivors of critical illness who have post-intensive care syndrome. Developing and sustaining intensive care unit follow-up clinics can pose significant challenges, and clinics need to be tailored to the physical, personnel, and financial resources available at a given institution. Although no standard recipe guarantees a successful intensive care unit aftercare program, emerging clinics will need to address a common set of hurdles, including securing an adequate space; assembling an invested, multidisciplinary staff; procuring the necessary financial, information technology, and physical stuff; using the proper screening tools to identify patients most likely to benefit and to accurately identify disabilities during the visit; and selling it to colleagues, hospital administrators, and the community at large.

MeSH terms

  • Aftercare
  • Critical Care / psychology
  • Critical Illness* / psychology
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Humans
  • Intensive Care Units*
  • Survivors / psychology