Quick tip for families in ICU: When should you start your research about patient rights in ICU?

1 year ago
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https://intensivecarehotline.com/blog/quick-tip-for-families-in-icu-when-should-you-start-your-research-about-patient-rights-in-icu/

Quick tip for families in ICU: When should you start your research about patient rights in ICU?

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14 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $1,999
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7 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $1,299
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4 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $999
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2 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $499
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You don’t have to use the 2, 4, 7, or 14 days in a row and you can use the days at your own pace.
Here's the hour option
Book 60 minutes 1:1 phone consulting and advocacy for $249 (can be credited towards any of the options above)- click on the link
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Or you can join the membership here where you have access to me in the membership area for only $97/month where I advise daily and where you also have access to more material including all of our eBooks! Furthermore, you’ll get a 20% discount for 1:1 phone consulting and advocacy if you are a member!
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Hi, it’s Patrik Hutzel from intensivecarehotline.com with another quick tip for families in intensive care.

Today, I’ll probably go a little bit on a rant because we’ve been professionally consulting with a client in the last 24 hours, who’s just been through a very traumatic experience, and I’ll come to the traumatic experience in a minute. But the tip today really is that, “You cannot start your research early enough” because if you don’t, quite literally can be deadly. Then, I will explain in a moment why.

So, the client that we are working with had their 81-year-old mother in the emergency room couple of days ago. She went in with signs of shortness of breath, signs of chest pain, potentially heart attack, and she was an elderly lady who was frail, but still had a good quality of life the day before she passed away in the emergency department. She was sitting in the sun, had a cup of coffee, and enjoyed time with her husband.

So, she definitely had a good quality of life. But the lady went into the emergency room, surrounded by her son and her daughter. And as soon as she went into the emergency department, she deteriorated very rapidly, and she had to be started on inotropes to maintain a blood pressure that is sustainable with life. But within a couple of hours of the emergency team starting some inotropes or vasopressors, they decided to discontinue the vasopressors and letting her die, because in their mind she had no future “quality of life”.

Continuation...
https://intensivecarehotline.com/blog/quick-tip-for-families-in-icu-when-should-you-start-your-research-about-patient-rights-in-icu/

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