Ventilator-Associated Conditions Versus Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Different by Design

被引:0
|
作者
Michael Klompas
机构
[1] Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute,Department of Population Medicine
[2] Brigham and Women’s Hospital,Department of Medicine
来源
关键词
Ventilator-associated conditions; Ventilator-associated pneumonia; Quality improvement; Healthcare epidemiology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a new surveillance concept called ventilator-associated conditions (VACs) in early 2013. VAC was created to overcome some of the limitations of traditional ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) definitions, including their complexity, subjectivity, and insensitivity to complications other than pneumonia. VAC is defined by sustained increases in ventilator support after ≥2 days of stable or decreasing settings. The VAC definition was designed to be objective, reproducible, and amenable to automated analysis. Moreover, VAC purposefully broadens the scope of surveillance to include physiologically significant complications of care in addition to pneumonia, most commonly pulmonary edema, atelectasis, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. VAC definitions offer an opportunity for hospital quality improvement programs to get a fuller picture of the breadth and burden of complications in their critically ill populations and to use these data to catalyze enhanced prevention and control programs to better prevent these conditions.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ventilator-Associated Conditions Versus Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Different by Design
    Klompas, Michael
    [J]. CURRENT INFECTIOUS DISEASE REPORTS, 2014, 16 (10)
  • [2] Prevention of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia and Ventilator-Associated Conditions
    Mishra, Shakti Bedanta
    Azim, Afzal
    Muzzafar, Syed Nabeel
    [J]. CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2015, 43 (11) : E527 - E528
  • [3] Prevention of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia and Ventilator-Associated Conditions Reply
    Damas, Pierre
    [J]. CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2015, 43 (11) : E528 - E528
  • [4] Ventilator-Associated Tracheobronchitis and Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
    Kollef, Marin H.
    [J]. CHEST, 2013, 144 (01) : 3 - 5
  • [5] From ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis to ventilator-associated pneumonia
    Martin-Loeches, I.
    Nseir, S.
    Valles, J.
    Artigas, A.
    [J]. REANIMATION, 2013, 22 (03): : 231 - 237
  • [6] Is there a continuum between ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis and ventilator-associated pneumonia?
    Nseir, Saad
    Povoa, Pedro
    Salluh, Jorge
    Rodriguez, Alejandro
    Martin-Loeches, Ignacio
    [J]. INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE, 2016, 42 (07) : 1190 - 1192
  • [7] Is there a continuum between ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis and ventilator-associated pneumonia?
    Saad Nseir
    Pedro Povoa
    Jorge Salluh
    Alejandro Rodriguez
    Ignacio Martin-Loeches
    [J]. Intensive Care Medicine, 2016, 42 : 1190 - 1192
  • [8] Ventilator-associated pneumonia
    Leong, Jason R.
    Huang, David T.
    [J]. SURGICAL CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2006, 86 (06) : 1409 - +
  • [9] Ventilator-associated pneumonia
    Charles, M. V. Pravin
    Kali, Arunava
    Easow, Joshy M.
    Joseph, Noyal Maria
    Ravishankar, Murugesan
    Srinivasan, Srirangaraj
    Kumar, Shailesh
    Umadevi, Sivaraman
    [J]. AUSTRALASIAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2014, 7 (08): : 334 - 344
  • [10] Ventilator-associated pneumonia
    Torres, A
    Carlet, J
    Bouza, E
    Brun-Buisson, C
    Chastre, J
    Ewig, S
    Fagon, JY
    Marquette, CH
    Muñoz, P
    Niederman, MS
    Papazian, L
    Rello, J
    Rouby, JJ
    Van Saene, H
    Welte, T
    [J]. EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2001, 17 (05) : 1034 - 1045