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Quick tip for families in intensive care: Another story of two steps forward and one step back!
Quick tip for families in intensive care: Another story of two steps forward and one step back!
Here are the phone options
One day 1:1 consulting and advocacy FACE TO FACE or via zoom $20,000 per day
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/one-day-11-consulting-in-person-face/
Book your free 15-minute phone consultation here
http://intensivecarehotline.com/scheduling-appointment/
Call directly 24/7
+1 415-915-0090 USA/Canada
+44 118 324 3018 UK
+6141 094 2230 Australia
Email support@intensivecarehotline.com
Get 1:1 consulting and advocacy
1:1 phone counselling
http://intensivecarehotline.com/one-on-one-counselling/
Become a member for families of critically ill Patients in Intensive Care
https://intensivecarehotline.com/intensivecaresupport-org-membership/
Immediate action steps http://intensivecarehotline.com/take-control-take-charge/immediate-action-steps/
https://intensivecareathome.com
And if you need a medical record review, click on the link and we can help you with reviewing your loved one’s medical records while they’re in ICU.
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/review-of-medical-records/
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/IntensiveCareHotline
Twitter: https://twitter.com/icuhotline
30 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $3,299
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/thirty-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
14 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $1,999
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/fourteen-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
7 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $1,299
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/seven-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
4 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $999
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/four-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
2 days 24/7 unlimited 1:1 phone and email support, including speaking to doctors and nurses directly, as well as participating in family meetings over the phone for $499
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/two-days-11-phone-consulting-us/
You don’t have to use the 2, 4, 7, or 14 days in a row and you can use the days at your own pace.
Here's the hour option
Book 60 minutes 1:1 phone consulting and advocacy for $249 (can be credited towards any of the options above)- click on the link
https://intensivecarehotline.thrivecart.com/one-hour-11-phone-consulting-us/
Or you can join the membership here where you have access to me in the membership area for only $97/month where I advise daily and where you also have access to more material including all of our eBooks! Furthermore, you’ll get a 20% discount for 1:1 phone consulting and advocacy if you are a member!
https://intensivecarehotline.com/intensivecaresupport-org-membership/
Here is also a link to case studies
https://intensivecarehotline.com/category/questions/
https://intensivecareathome.com/category/case-studies/
Hi, it’s Patrik Hutzel from intensivecarehotline.com with another quick tip for families in intensive care.
Today, I want to talk about, how long does it take to wake up after a traumatic brain injury? So, currently we are working with a client who had a traumatic brain injury around three weeks ago after this gentleman fell off a scaffold during work and he fell off a scaffold six meters head forward, apparently he was limp before he fell down.
So initially the CT scan showed some bleeds on the brain, of course, other fractures as well. But looking closer at the CT scan, the bleed compared to other CT scans that I’ve seen over the years, it wasn’t actually that big. He had a craniectomy, basically meaning he had parts of his skull removed so that it was easier for the intensive care team to manage and control intracranial pressures. If intracranial pressures, which are the pressures in the brain are too high, patients can die. If it goes above a certain level, patients die.
Anyway, so the brain pressures were pretty well controlled from the start. He was in an induced coma , but he wasn’t waking up.
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