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  • Title: Admission and discharge guidelines for the pediatric patient requiring intermediate care.
    Author: Jaimovich DG, Committee on Hospital Care and Section on Critical Care.
    Journal: Crit Care Med; 2004 May; 32(5):1215-8. PubMed ID: 15190975.
    Abstract:
    During the past three decades, the specialty of pediatric critical care medicine has grown rapidly, leading to a number of pediatric intensive care units being opened across the country. Many patients who are admitted to the hospital require a higher level of care than the routine inpatient general pediatric care, yet not to the degree of intensity as pediatric critical care; therefore, an intermediate care level has been developed in institutions providing multiple disciplinary subspecialty pediatric care. These patients may require frequent monitoring of vital signs and nursing interventions but usually do not require invasive monitoring. The admission of the pediatric intermediate care patient is guided by physiologic parameters depending on the respective organ system involved relative to the institution's resources and capacity in caring for a patient in a general care environment. This report provides admission and discharge guidelines for intermediate pediatric care. Intermediate care promotes greater flexibility in patient triage and provides a cost-effective alternative to admission to a pediatric intensive care unit. This level of care may enhance the efficiency of care and improve the healthcare affordability for patients receiving intermediate care.
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