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The future of acute and emergency care

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posted on 2021-08-19, 15:38 authored by Virginia Newcombe, Timothy Coats, Paul Dark, Anthony Gordon, Steve Harris, Danny F McAuley, David K Menon, Susanna Price, Zudin Puthucheary, Mervyn Singer
Improved outcomes for acutely unwell patients are predicated on early identification of deterioration, accelerating the time to accurate diagnosis of the underlying condition, selection and titration of treatments that target biological phenotypes, and personalised endpoints to achieve optimal benefit yet minimise iatrogenic harm. Technological developments entering routine clinical practice over the next decade will deliver a sea change in patient management. Enhanced point of care diagnostics, more sophisticated physiological and biochemical monitoring with superior analytics and computer-aided support tools will all add considerable artificial intelligence to complement clinical skills. Experts in different fields of emergency and critical care medicine offer their perspectives as to which research developments could make a big difference within the next decade.

History

Citation

Future Healthcare Journal, 2021, Vol 8, No 2: e230–6

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Future healthcare journal

Volume

8

Issue

2

Pagination

e230 - e236

Publisher

Royal College of Physicians

issn

2055-3323

eissn

2055-3331

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-07-01

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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