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Surgery Residency Curriculum-ICU

The Surgical ICU at BMC is an integral part of overall ICU services which function on a multidisciplinary level. Adult patients are housed in a combined Surgical/Medical unit comprised of three eight bed pods. No specific bed assignment is made as either surgical or medical. In general 60% of the patient throughput is composed of surgical patients. Although census varies weekly over the course of a year, about 20% of the patients on the surgical service are post op complications. A further 20% are emergent trauma patients. The bulk of the patient load consists of elective post operative monitoring patients with projected or known hemodynamic instability (60%).

 

In terms of time, the patients who remain the longest are neurotrauma patients and those with hypoproteinemic related muscle strength/respiratory impairment. Overall length of stay figures are thus highest for these two groups although in terms of proportion to overall admissions their numbers are low.

 

The basic goal of this ICU is to prevent or minimize perturbation of basic homeostatic mechanisms via monitoring and prophylactic therapy, and in those cases where such instability has occurred to correct the physiology. This is achieved through the use of mechanical and medicinal life support.

The SICU is organized around the team concept. For practical purposes the core team consists of:

  • A surgical resident,

  • An Ob-Gyn resident OR surgical intern,

  • An Anesthesia resident,

  • A bedside nurse.

The overall team leader is generally the senior-most resident. The team is facilitated by an intensivist.

 

The SICU team is responsible for coordinating and optimizing patient care. This is done by assuring in-depth discussion of diagnostic and therapeutic intervention with appropriate team members or consultants; reviewing these ideas with a senior member and other involved parties; verbalizing a care plan on rounds and then carrying out the plan. Due to the vast changes in the critically ill over short time spans, this process is shortened to immediate individual response as required; followed by rapid discussion with the Intensivist.