Quick tip for families in ICU: Should my Dad have a tracheostomy after a Traumatic brain injury?

10 months ago
22

https://intensivecarehotline.com/blog/quick-tip-for-families-in-icu-should-my-dad-have-a-tracheostomy-after-a-traumatic-brain-injury/

Quick tip for families in intensive care: Should my Dad have a tracheostomy after a Traumatic brain injury?

Here are the phone options
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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.
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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!
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Here is also a link to case studies
https://intensivecarehotline.com/category/questions/
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Hi, it’s Patrik Hutzel from intensivecarehotline.com with another quick tip for families in intensive care.

So at the moment, we are working with a client who had a traumatic brain injury after a fall from a scaffold. And that gentleman fell six meters down to the ground, head forward. A massive insult to his brain, massive brain bleed, ended up for emergency brain surgery with a craniectomy, which basically means they removed parts of the skull to deal with the increased brain pressures.

Now that got the brain pressures under control. Now he’s been in intensive care, very unstable for the last two weeks, and he’s not waking up after having been off sedation for a number of days. His Glasgow Coma Scale fluctuates between a 3 and a 5 which means he’s not brain damaged, but he’s by the looks of things, severely brain damaged.

The intensive care team is pushing for a withdrawal of treatment, saying that, this gentleman won’t survive for the next few days. But if you watch any of my videos, I have given countless examples where the predictions of intensive care teams are completely and utterly wrong. And patients do survive, 90% of intensive care patients survive according to the research, but intensive care teams are not telling you that because they want their beds emptied.

Continuation...
https://intensivecarehotline.com/blog/quick-tip-for-families-in-icu-should-my-dad-have-a-tracheostomy-after-a-traumatic-brain-injury/

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