A recent quality-of-care assessment of the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) at Miami Children's conducted by the National Association of Children's Hospitals compares patient outcomes with results obtained from similar intensive care units around the country. Miami Children's PICU was ranked excellent, the number one unit in the study, due principally to better than predicted results obtained in caring for the highest risk patients.
The Miami Children's PICU is the most experienced pediatric and neonatal Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) resource for children with life-threatening heart and lung conditions in the State of Florida, and one of the largest in the nation. It is one of three pediatric apheresis blood treatment centers in the state (the only one operating 24 hours a day) for children who require plasma exchange (meningitis), red cell exchange (sickle cell crisis), prosorba column (autoimmune viruses), leukopheresis (leukemia) or stem-cell harvesting (bone marrow transplants).
Miami Children's PICU patients spend more than 2000 patient days attached to ventilators each year another measure of the units acuity of care. Despite handling the most severely stricken children (with an average of nearly 300 patients transferred from other hospitals every year), Miami Children's Pediatric Intensive Care Unit consistently outperforms the national averages, both in mortality rates (2% vs. 6%) and in length of patient stays (3.5 days vs. 4.7 days).
Successful outcomes such as these speak directly to the value of specialized child care. Miami Children's PICU has reached a critical mass in acute care for children and it shows. The experience of staff physicians and clinical care nurses, their procedures and even their equipment reflect the particular needs of children.
Many neonatal and pediatric patients at other hospitals who face life-threatening medical conditions requiring critical care are transferred to Miami Children's PICU by a specialized mobile intensive care unit known as LifeFlight. This highly trained team of physicians, nurses, EMTs and paramedics utilizes self-contained life-support equipment to stabilize, treat and monitor a child upon contact at the referring facility and throughout transport via ground, helicopter or fixed-wing ambulance. Whether a patient is admitted to Miami Children's under the care of a personal physician, by a staff physician or through another intensive care unit, the child becomes the center of a multidisciplinary team effort. More than 60 nurses monitor patient progress minute-to-minute, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Respirators, EKG monitors, intravenous tubes and the technology of todays intensive care can bewilder a child and family. For this reason, to address virtually every patient and family concern, the medical staff of Miami Children's PICU is supported by an extensive family-centered, human resources team that includes patient-family representatives, social workers, child life specialists and hospital chaplains.
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We Have the Best Outcomes |
We Care for Critically Ill Patients |
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According to VPS, an independent national ICU database, the PICU at MCH maintains one of the best outcomes in the country, with an average mortality of 1.89 from 2005 to 2007, as compared to 3.08 % among our peers. Our risk-adjusted mortality (ratio of actual mortality to expected mortality) is 0.56 compared to 0.99 in our peer group. |
We use Pediatric Index of Mortality-2 (PIM-2) to score severity of illness of our patients. The VPS data shows that our patients severity of illness is 15% higher than our peer PICUs. Even as we care for the most critically ill patients, we maintain outstanding outcomes. |
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