![]() | Mitchell M Levy |
Prominent publications by Mitchell M Levy
Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008
[ PUBLICATION ]
OBJECTIVE: To provide an update to the original Surviving Sepsis Campaign clinical management guidelines, "Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock," published in 2004.
DESIGN: Modified Delphi method with a consensus conference of 55 international experts, several subsequent meetings of subgroups and key individuals, teleconferences, and electronic-based discussion among subgroups and among the entire committee. This process was conducted ...
Also Ranks for: Septic Shock | sepsis campaign | international guidelines | fluid resuscitation 1c | antibiotic therapy |
Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock, 2012
[ PUBLICATION ]
OBJECTIVE: To provide an update to the "Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock," last published in 2008.
DESIGN: A consensus committee of 68 international experts representing 30 international organizations was convened. Nominal groups were assembled at key international meetings (for those committee members attending the conference). A formal conflict of interest policy was developed at the onset of the process and enforced throughout. The ...
Also Ranks for: Septic Shock | international guidelines | sepsis campaign | tissue hypoperfusion | ards patients |
OBJECTIVE: To provide an update to the "Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock," last published in 2008.
DESIGN: A consensus committee of 68 international experts representing 30 international organizations was convened. Nominal groups were assembled at key international meetings (for those committee members attending the conference). A formal conflict of interest policy was developed at the onset of the process and enforced throughout. The ...
Also Ranks for: Sepsis Campaign | septic shock | ards 1b | tissue hypoperfusion | recommendations patients |
Improvement in Process of Care and Outcome After a Multicenter Severe Sepsis Educational Program in Spain
[ PUBLICATION ]
CONTEXT: Concern exists that current guidelines for care of patients with severe sepsis and septic shock are followed variably, possibly due to a lack of adequate education.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a national educational program based on the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines affected processes of care and hospital mortality for severe sepsis.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS: Before and after design in 59 medical-surgical intensive care units (ICUs) located throughout Spain. All ...
Also Ranks for: Severe Sepsis | educational program | stay patients | hospital length | resuscitation bundle |
IMPORTANCE: Definitions of sepsis and septic shock were last revised in 2001. Considerable advances have since been made into the pathobiology (changes in organ function, morphology, cell biology, biochemistry, immunology, and circulation), management, and epidemiology of sepsis, suggesting the need for reexamination.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate and, as needed, update definitions for sepsis and septic shock.
PROCESS: A task force (n = 19) with expertise in sepsis pathobiology, clinical ...
Also Ranks for: Septic Shock | definitions sepsis | clinical criteria | task force | organ dysfunction |
Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008
[ PUBLICATION ]
OBJECTIVE: To provide an update to the original Surviving Sepsis Campaign clinical management guidelines, "Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock," published in 2004.
DESIGN: Modified Delphi method with a consensus conference of 55 international experts, several subsequent meetings of subgroups and key individuals, teleconferences, and electronic-based discussion among subgroups and among the entire committee. This process was conducted ...
Also Ranks for: Septic Shock | sepsis campaign | international guidelines | antibiotic therapy | fluid resuscitation |
Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock
[ PUBLICATION ]
OBJECTIVE: In 2003, critical care and infectious disease experts representing 11 international organizations developed management guidelines for severe sepsis and septic shock that would be of practical use for the bedside clinician, under the auspices of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign, an international effort to increase awareness and improve outcome in severe sepsis.
DESIGN: The process included a modified Delphi method, a consensus conference, several subsequent smaller meetings of ...
Also Ranks for: Septic Shock | severe sepsis | antibiotic therapy | campaign guidelines | pediatric considerations |
Efficacy of Recombinant Human Erythropoietin in Critically Ill Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial
[ PUBLICATION ]
CONTEXT: Anemia is common in critically ill patients and results in a large number of red blood cell (RBC) transfusions. Recent data have raised the concern that RBC transfusions may be associated with worse clinical outcomes in some patients.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy in critically ill patients of a weekly dosing schedule of recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) to decrease the occurrence of RBC transfusion.
DESIGN: A prospective, randomized, double-blind, ...
Also Ranks for: Recombinant Human Erythropoietin | rbc transfusion | patients rhuepo | study day | randomized controlled trial |
The CRIT Study: Anemia and blood transfusion in the critically ill—Current clinical practice in the United States*
[ PUBLICATION ]
OBJECTIVE: To quantify the incidence of anemia and red blood cell (RBC) transfusion practice in critically ill patients and to examine the relationship of anemia and RBC transfusion to clinical outcomes.
DESIGN: Prospective, multiple center, observational cohort study of intensive care unit (ICU) patients in the United States. Enrollment period was from August 2000 to April 2001. Patients were enrolled within 48 hrs of ICU admission. Patient follow-up was for 30 days, hospital discharge, ...
Also Ranks for: United States | blood transfusion | rbc units | crit study | icu patients |
OBJECTIVE: The primary goal of this study was to address the documented deficiencies in end-of-life care (EOLC) in intensive care unit settings by identifying key EOLC domains and related quality indicators for use in the intensive care unit through a consensus process. A second goal was to propose specific clinician and organizational behaviors and interventions that might be used to improve these EOLC quality indicators.
PARTICIPANTS: Participants were the 36 members of the Robert Wood ...
Also Ranks for: Quality Indicators | intensive unit | life eolc | interventions domains | consensus process |
Association Between the New York Sepsis Care Mandate and In-Hospital Mortality for Pediatric Sepsis
[ PUBLICATION ]
Importance: The death of a pediatric patient with sepsis motivated New York to mandate statewide sepsis treatment in 2013. The mandate included a 1-hour bundle of blood cultures, broad-spectrum antibiotics, and a 20-mL/kg intravenous fluid bolus. Whether completing the bundle elements within 1 hour improves outcomes is unclear.
Objective: To determine the risk-adjusted association between completing the 1-hour pediatric sepsis bundle and individual bundle elements with in-hospital ...
Also Ranks for: 1 Hour | hospital mortality | new york | pediatric sepsis | fluid bolus |
OBJECTIVE: In 1991, the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) and the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) convened a "Consensus Conference," the goals of which were "to provide a conceptual and a practical framework to define the systemic inflammatory response to infection, which is a progressive injurious process that falls under the generalized term 'sepsis' and includes sepsis-associated organ dysfunction as well." The general definitions introduced as a result of that ...
Also Ranks for: Sepsis Definitions | chest physicians | signs symptoms | multiple organ failure | sccm european society |
Outcomes of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign in intensive care units in the USA and Europe: a prospective cohort study
[ PUBLICATION ]
BACKGROUND: Mortality from severe sepsis and septic shock differs across continents, countries, and regions. We aimed to use data from the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) to compare models of care and outcomes for patients with severe sepsis and septic shock in the USA and Europe.
METHODS: The SSC was introduced into more than 200 sites in Europe and the USA. All patients identified with severe sepsis and septic shock in emergency departments or hospital wards and admitted to intensive ...
Also Ranks for: Surviving Sepsis Campaign | patients severe sepsis | prospective cohort study | septic shock | stay icu |
BACKGROUND: In 2013, New York began requiring hospitals to follow protocols for the early identification and treatment of sepsis. However, there is controversy about whether more rapid treatment of sepsis improves outcomes in patients.
METHODS: We studied data from patients with sepsis and septic shock that were reported to the New York State Department of Health from April 1, 2014, to June 30, 2016. Patients had a sepsis protocol initiated within 6 hours after arrival in the emergency ...
Also Ranks for: Treatment Sepsis | administration antibiotics | interquartile range | 3hour bundle | intravenous fluids |
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate which mode of preextubation ventilatory support most closely approximates the work of breathing performed by spontaneously breathing patients after extubation.
DESIGN: Prospective observational design.
SETTING: Medical, surgical, and coronary intensive care units in a university hospital.
PATIENTS: A total of 22 intubated subjects were recruited when weaned and ready for extubation.
INTERVENTIONS: Subjects were ventilated with continuous positive airway pressure at ...
Also Ranks for: Work Breathing | tidal volume | esophageal pressure | inspiratory flow | support ventilation |
Mitchell M Levy: Influence Statistics
Concept | World rank |
---|---|
limitation inspiratory | #1 |
icu rhode island | #1 |
500ml fluid bolus | #1 |
videos lstm network | #1 |
guideline bundles | #1 |
families medical therapies | #1 |
191 3820 videos | #1 |
spiritual support families | #1 |
endings sofa score | #1 |
support methods families | #1 |
campaign guidelines | #1 |
discharges hospitals percent | #1 |
δvpeak carotid | #1 |
term sepsis | #1 |
deep rna sequencing | #1 |
state mandate align | #1 |
sepsis campaign management | #1 |
∆peep | #1 |
sepsis campaign priorities | #1 |
intracranial hemorrhage pct | #1 |
3241 hospitals | #1 |
hglm treatment effects | #1 |
43204 severe sepsis | #1 |
compliance icu type | #1 |
longer time administration | #1 |
determine fluid responsiveness | #1 |
sepsis tissue hypoperfusion | #1 |
distinguish sepsis | #1 |
volume ∆eelv | #1 |
restrictive 12 deaths | #1 |
lstm network data | #1 |
obvious answers | #1 |
materials eolc content | #1 |
clinician ratings quality | #1 |
physicians sepsis shock | #1 |
guideline bundles adherence | #1 |
individual adjuvant therapies | #1 |
mice critical illness | #1 |
questions usual | #1 |
concomitant drotrecogin alfa | #1 |
materials documentation | #1 |
clinicians increasing challenges | #1 |
antibiotics completion | #1 |
eol training | #1 |
10 increase compliance | #1 |
rounds resuscitation | #1 |
processes collaborative approach | #1 |
sepsis bundle programs | #1 |
ongoing campaigns evidence | #1 |
behavior clinical outcome | #1 |
Key People For Severe Sepsis
Mitchell M Levy:Expert Impact
Concepts for whichMitchell M Levyhas direct influence:Severe sepsis, Septic shock, Fluid responsiveness, Sepsis campaign, Mechanical ventilation, New york, Patients severe sepsis, United states.
Mitchell M Levy:KOL impact
Concepts related to the work of other authors for whichfor which Mitchell M Levy has influence:Septic shock, Severe sepsis, Emergency department, Critically patients, Intensive unit, Acute kidney injury, Critical illness.
Tools
Is this your profile? Claim your profile Copy URL Embed Link to your profile |