Ten Steps Toward Improving In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Quality of Care and Outcomes
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Date
2023Author
Nallamothu, Brahmajee K.
Greif, Robert
Anderson, Theresa
Atiq, Huba
Couto, Thomaz Bittencourt
Considine, Julie
De Caen, Allan R.
Djärv, Therese
Doll, Ann
Douma, Matthew J.
Edelson, Dana P.
Xu, Feng
Finn, Judith C.
Firestone, Grace
Girotra, Saket
Lauridsen, Kasper G.
Leong, Carrie Kah-Lai
Lim, Swee Han
Morley, Peter T.
Morrison, Laurie J.
Moskowitz, Ari
Sankardas, Ajit Mullasari
Mohamed, Mahmoud Tageldin Mustafa
Myburgh, Michelle Christy
Nadkarni, Vinay M.
Neumar, Robert W.
Nolan, Jerry P.
Odakha, Justine Athieno
Olasveengen, Theresa M.
Orosz, Judit
Perkins, Gavin D.
Previdi, Jeanette K.
Vaillancourt, Christian
Montgomery, William H.
Sasson, Comilla
Chan, Paul S.
on behalf of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation
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Improving in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) quality of care for adult and pediatric patients—not simply survival—requires a comprehensive set of programs and actions. Ideally, these should be embedded in a system of care that (1) plans and prepares for IHCA, (2) prevents IHCA when avoidable, (3) delivers high-quality, guidelinebased resuscitation, and (4) continuously evaluates and improves itself within a culture of person-centered care.
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