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Published in: Critical Care 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Letter

Decision-making in the detection and management of patients with sepsis in resource-limited settings: the importance of clinical examination

Authors: Rashan Haniffa, Abigail Beane, Arjen M. Dondorp

Published in: Critical Care | Issue 1/2018

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Excerpt

We read with interest the study by Andrews et al. [1] and the related correspondence from Shrestha et al. [2]. We share the concern that clinical examination (and observations) appear(s) to be perceived as relatively unimportant in both the detection of the unwell patient and in the titration of interventions such as fluids, oxygen, antibiotics and vasopressors in LMICs. Studies have highlighted the limited availability of clinical observations in acutely unwell LMIC settings, which in addition to hindering detection of the deteriorating patient also complicates evaluation of an individual’s treatment and standards of care evaluation; for example, the assessment and implementation of early warning scores and prognostic models [3]. In settings where potential for rescue by resource-intense interventions (e.g. ventilation) is remote, we too are surprised by the absence of a more central role for clinical examination and observations. It is of further concern that such limitations remain in the relatively high-resource, high-visibility environment of a clinical trial. …
Literature
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go back to reference Beane A, De Silva AP, De Silva N, Jayasingha AS, Rathnayake DRM, Sigera PC, Athapattu PL, Mahipala PG, Rashan A, Munasinghe SB, Jayasinghe KSA, Dondorp AM, Haniffa. Evaluation of the feasibility and performance of existing Early Warning Score (EWS) to identify patients at risk of adverse outcomes in a low-middle income country (LMIC) setting: a longitudinal observational cohort study. BMJ Open. Accepted for publication January 2018. Manuscript ID:2017–019387. in press Beane A, De Silva AP, De Silva N, Jayasingha AS, Rathnayake DRM, Sigera PC, Athapattu PL, Mahipala PG, Rashan A, Munasinghe SB, Jayasinghe KSA, Dondorp AM, Haniffa. Evaluation of the feasibility and performance of existing Early Warning Score (EWS) to identify patients at risk of adverse outcomes in a low-middle income country (LMIC) setting: a longitudinal observational cohort study. BMJ Open. Accepted for publication January 2018. Manuscript ID:2017–019387. in press
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Metadata
Title
Decision-making in the detection and management of patients with sepsis in resource-limited settings: the importance of clinical examination
Authors
Rashan Haniffa
Abigail Beane
Arjen M. Dondorp
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Critical Care / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1364-8535
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-018-1971-7

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