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Practice of Critical Care in South Korea Gee Young Suh, MD Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medic ine Samsung Medical Center SungKyunKwan University School of Medicine Seoul, Korea

Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

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Practice of Critical Care in South Korea. Gee Young Suh, MD Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Samsung Medical Center SungKyunKwan University School of Medicine Seoul, Korea. Types of ICU. Open vs closed Many hospitals employ open system - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Gee Young Suh, MDDepartment of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine

Samsung Medical CenterSungKyunKwan University School of Medicine

Seoul, Korea

Page 2: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea
Page 3: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Types of ICU

• Open vs closed

– Many hospitals employ open system

– Some hospitals employ closed system in selec

ted ICU’s

Page 4: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Training of ICU Physicians

• No formal training in critical care medicine

• Chief of ICU– Surgical or multidisciplinary ICU: many anest

hesiologist, surgeons

– Medical ICU: pulmonologist, cardiologist

– Coronary care unit: cardiologist

Page 5: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Formal Training• Just few hours of clinical clerkship for medical

students at most universities• Residents

– No formal guideline for training residents in critical care– In 2001, working group to form a formal guideline was

established by Korean Society of Critical Care Medicine

• Fellows– No formal guideline– Different levels of training in different hospitals

Page 6: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Key Clinical Decision Makers• Intensivist

– Ventilator and hemodynamic decision making– Admission and discharge decisions

• Attending physician– Family counseling– Treatment of specific diseases

• Fellow/House residents– Day-to-day care of patients

Page 7: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Problems Hindering Development of Critical Care in Korea

• Low cost of critical care

– Most hospitals: private

– Medical costs: set and controlled by the government

– Administrators see ICU’s as money-losing department

• Few true intensivists

– Even active interested doctors cannot devote full time to the ICU

• No formal training or guideline in critical care

Page 8: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea

Pressing Educational Needs• More physicians devoted to critical care me

dicine are needed– Teach physicians and administrators why intens

ivist-directed ICU’s are important and necessary

– Educate physicians interested in critical care medicine the basic skills necessary to become intensivists

Page 9: Practice of Critical Care in South Korea