Critical Care Medicine (CCM) is a specialty that includes the management of patients with a dangerous, frequent and complex clinic, as well as a critical illness. The CCM doctor, also called the Intensivist in some parts of the world, is competent in diagnosing and treating these patients. These patients may experience a fracture or dislocation of at least one organ, including heart and blood vessels, pneumonia, neurologic, liver, kidney, or intestinal structures. Methods used to help support and diagnose the underlying disease include endotracheal intubation, venous focal catheterization, vascular cannulation, aspiratory corridor catheterization, bronchoscopy, lumbar cut, thoracentesis, paracentesis, and thoracostomy of the chest. The modern ICU is at the forefront of any hospital in the hospital with state-of-the-art technology. Over the past two decades, there has been an explosion of information in our understanding of critical illness. Over the past decade, the ICU has evolved from a controlled practice based on experience to more precise and science-based development. Essential medicines are at the forefront of the development of modern medicine and information technology today. A systematic, thought-provoking, patient-based selection of acuity rather than age (geriatric medicine), procedure (anesthesiology), organ (lung), or disease (endocrinology) is used. This, therefore, challenges the very culture of responsibility for patient care. A neurosurgeon, general medicine, lung, and surgeon may receive additional intensive care training to become a CCM physician
For more information please contact us! 9891534100.