Leapfrog and critical care: evidence- and reality-based intensive care for the 21st century
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
The American journal of medicine
Abstract
In 2000, the Business Roundtable published its Leapfrog report, which contained suggestions for improving administration of critical care. The Leapfrog Group intends to influence health care policy by pressuring insurers and hospitals to implement its guidelines, and both internists and intensivists are likely to be affected if these recommendations are realized. This article outlines the Leapfrog standards for critical care and examines critically the evidence used to justify them. Aside from the guideline that all critically ill patients should be cared for by intensivists, Leapfrog's standards for critical care are based either on weak or no scientific evidence. Rather, most of the guidelines are grounded in common sense and rational extrapolation of the data; as such, they are a reasonable starting point for debate by physicians and policymakers about optimal methods of achieving intensivist-guided care of critically ill patients.
First Page
188
Last Page
93
DOI
10.1016/j.amjmed.2003.08.032
Publication Date
2-1-2004
Recommended Citation
Manthous, Constantine A., "Leapfrog and critical care: evidence- and reality-based intensive care for the 21st century" (2004). Internal Medicine. 103.
https://scholar.bridgeporthospital.org/internal_medicine/103
Identifier
14749164 (pubmed); 10.1016/j.amjmed.2003.08.032 (doi); S0002934303006594 (pii)