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Serve or Swerve – what will Mervyn say?!

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If you haven’t heard of him, you’ve been living under a rock somewhere! Prof. Mervyn Singer OBE, is a renowned Professor of Critical Care from the UK. He is one of the most animated speakers you will ever see, aside from Peter Brindley, JL Vincent! He will be talking at the Intensive Care Society’s SOA25 Congress in Birmingham from July 1-3, 2025.

Book here!

I took some wild guesses at what he would be talking about, and MIGHT have talked to him too…..

His topic, “A 40-year review of ICU evolution: The Very Good, the Good, and the Not-So-Good,” is going to be a fabulous insight into what our most esteemed Prof. thinks of decades of progress….well….potentially progress?!

Will Merve swerve, or serve though…and on what?

All the good?

There are the major breakthroughs since the 1980s that have transformed ICU care:

He may discuss incremental progress that has solidified ICU practices:

All the bad?

The “Not-So-Good” will likely address persistent challenges and areas needing improvement, many of which may be considered as “Iatrogenic Harm”:

What else?

Merv’s other thoughtful insights will probably emphasize the need for continued research:

Let’s chat about the gritty topics!

Here’s the jump list!

  1. ICU Infections
  2. ICU delirium
  3. Ventilator Associated Lung Injury
  4. Sepsis
  5. PICS
  6. Outreach
  7. MDT
  8. Technology
  9. Audit
  10. Anarchy
  11. Negative Studies
  12. The Firm

These remain a significant challenge, despite progress in infection control.

Merv might emphasize the need for stricter protocols, like those seen in the

Of note, iatrogenic harm still persists, pointing to unintended consequences like the Clostridium difficile (C. diff) outbreak following the introduction of alcohol-based hand gels. While these gels reduced other infections, they were ineffective against C. diff spores, leading to a spike in cases—a reminder that new interventions can have unexpected downsides.

No Direct Causation of Increased Infections:

Hand Gel Limitations and Over-Reliance:

ICU-Specific Factors:

Confounding Factors:

A pervasive issue affecting up to 80% of mechanically ventilated patients, with long-lasting effects on cognitive health. Why:

A 2022 article on the future of ICU care highlights how the COVID-19 pandemic worsened delirium incidence due to increased benzodiazepine use, restricted family visitation, and staffing shortages—factors that disrupted non-pharmacological interventions like the ABCDEF bundle (Awakening and Breathing Coordination, Delirium monitoring, Early mobility, Family engagement). Mervyn may mention the over-reliance on sedation during the pandemic, pointing to studies showing that minimizing sedation and prioritizing early mobility can reduce delirium incidence. For instance, a 2023 study noted that daily mobilizations over 40 minutes improved functional outcomes at ICU discharge. However, Merv might caution against over-optimism, as bedside assessments like the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU) remain the gold standard, and technological solutions need more validation.

Studies

Salluh et al. (2015) – Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Thein et al. (2020) – Meta-Analysis on Delirium-Associated Mortality

Wu et al. (2023) – Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Pandharipande et al. (2013) – BRAIN-ICU Study

Girard et al. (2018) – MIND Trial

Schweickert et al. (2009) – Early Mobilization Trial

Kotfis et al. (2021) – Review on Delirium in ICU

A definite preventable harm, but one Merv is likely to dwell on. The introduction of gospel lung-protective ventilation strategies change the face of the landscape (low tidal volume ventilation, established by the ARDSNet trial in 2000). A 2022 study using the MIMIC-IV database underscores this progress,

Lung-Protective Ventilation Strategies

Advanced Ventilator Modes

Extracorporeal Support

Pharmacologic and Adjunctive Therapies

Monitoring and Diagnostics

Artificial Intelligence and Decision Support

Rehabilitation and Post-ICU Care

On sepsis treatment, Merv will likely highlight the evolution of standardized protocols that have improved survival rates over the past 40 years. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign, updated in 2021, recommends early goal-directed therapy within 6 hours, including fluid resuscitation, vasopressors for persistent hypotension, and lactate monitoring.

A 2025 study on sepsis in Japan estimates 420,000 annual PICS cases following sepsis, underscoring its long-term impact.

Things We Do That Are Supported by Evidence

Early, Effective Antibiotics

Prompt Fluid Resuscitation and Source Control

Things That Evidence Did Not Support

Activated Protein C (Drotrecogin Alfa)

Early Goal-Directed Therapy (EGDT)

Critical Perspective and Future Directions

So, doing more is doing less and one size does not fit all! Its is the simple care and attention we are all trained for, that wins the race here! Oh, and the SSC…of course!

A huge and ever increasing burden for our patients. See our writeup here, will Merv talk along the same lines?

The ‘Angels of the hospital’, have to get a mention. Early intervention is always the key….Critical care outreach teams are now standard in many hospitals, and have enabled earlier identification of deteriorating patients on general wards. This shift, supported by tools like the National Early Warning Score (NEWS), has reduced ICU admissions by addressing issues before they escalate. A 2023 study in the UK found that outreach teams decreased cardiac arrest rates on wards by 15%, showcasing their impact. Mervyn likely sees this as a cornerstone of modern critical care, allowing for timely interventions that save lives.

Improved Patient Survival and Reduced Mortality

Reduction in Adverse Events

Support for Timely ICU Admissions and Reduced Readmissions

Enhanced Staff Support and Education

Specialised Care for Vulnerable Populations

Cost and Resource Efficiency

But…

The “Good” aspects of ICU evolution, according to Mervyn, may include the shift toward multidisciplinary and a more holistic approach. ICUs now integrate pharmacists, physiotherapists, and psychologists alongside doctors and nurses to address not just acute illness but also long-term recovery. This approach aligns with the ABCDEF bundle (Awakening and Breathing Coordination, Delirium monitoring, Early mobility, Family engagement), which a 2024 study linked to lower 6-month mortality when fully implemented. Mervyn will likely praised this collaborative model for improving patient outcomes, such as reducing ICU-acquired weakness through early mobilisation—shown in a 2023 study to improve functional outcomes at discharge when done for over 40 minutes daily.

Comprehensive Expertise and Diverse Perspectives

Improved Decision-Making and Error Reduction

Enhanced Patient-Centered Care

Optimized Resource Utilization and Efficiency

Continuity and Coordination of Care

Staff Support and Reduced Burnout

Evidence-Based and Standardized Care

Mervyn loves a bit of tech! He may site this as a “Good” advancement, citing innovations like continuous pulse oximetry, advanced hemodynamic monitoring, and emerging tools like EEG-based delirium detection. A 2024 study suggested that EEG monitoring could enable earlier delirium interventions, though Merv note that such technologies still need validation against bedside assessments like the CAM-ICU. However, he raised a significant “Not-So-Good” consequence of technology: the rise of Electronic Health Records (EHRs). While EHRs have streamlined documentation, Merv might argue they’ve pulled doctors away from the bedside, leading to a disconnect from patient physiology. Doctors now spend up to 40% of their time on administrative tasks, according to a 2023 survey, often prioritising screens over stethoscopes—a trend the Prof may see as detrimental to hands-on care.

  1. Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) for Predictive Analytics
    • Description: AI and ML algorithms analyze vast amounts of ICU data (vital signs, lab results, imaging) to predict patient outcomes, detect deterioration early, and guide personalized treatment. Examples include predicting septic shock, mortality risk, and optimal ventilator settings.
    • Promise: These systems can reduce mortality by enabling early interventions (e.g., 17% mortality reduction in septic shock prediction), optimize resource allocation, and support clinical decision-making in high-pressure environments.
    • Applications:
      • Septic Shock Prediction: KAIST’s MediGraph-Net2 uses wearable IoT data and graph neural networks to predict septic shock six hours earlier than standard protocols.
      • Outcome Prediction: An AI model predicts ICU patient outcomes with 92% accuracy by day five, identifying key mortality risk biomarkers.
      • Sepsis Diagnosis and Discharge Planning: AI algorithms assist in diagnosing sepsis and identifying patients ready for discharge, reducing ICU stays.
  2. Tele-ICU and Remote Monitoring (eICU)
    • Description: Tele-ICU systems use advanced software, high-definition video, and real-time data to allow intensivists to monitor patients remotely from centralized command centers. Systems like NewYork-Presbyterian’s eICU® enable 24/7 oversight across multiple hospitals.
    • Promise: Tele-ICU addresses shortages of ICU specialists, reduces medical errors, shortens hospital stays, and lowers costs by enabling proactive interventions. Studies show lower mortality rates and shorter ICU stays with telemedicine.,
    • Applications:
      • Real-Time Monitoring: eICU platforms track vital signs, ventilators, and lab results, using smart alarms to detect critical events early.
      • Multidisciplinary Care: Seoul National University Bundang Hospital’s eICU facilitates collaboration among specialists for infectious disease patients, reducing staff burden.
  3. Point-of-Care (POC) Diagnostic and Imaging Devices
    • Description: Compact, portable devices like handheld ultrasounds and POC haemoglobin analysers provide rapid diagnostics at the bedside, minimising infection risks and delays.
    • Promise: These devices improve timely monitoring, reduce morbidity, and are cost-effective, especially in resource-limited settings. For example, handheld ultrasounds were critical during COVID-19 for safe imaging.
    • Applications:
      • Handheld Ultrasounds: Used for real-time imaging in ICUs, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).
      • Hemoglobin and Pulse Oximetry: A University of Texas at Arlington device measures hemoglobin levels accurately at the bedside.
  4. Advanced Patient Monitoring Systems
    • Description: Multi-parameter monitors (e.g., aXcent medical’s CETUS x12) and SaaS platforms (e.g., Vigocare’s Vigo Vitals) track vital signs in real time, using AI to detect deviations and support clinical decisions.
    • Promise: These systems consolidate monitoring, reduce staff workload, and enable early detection of deterioration, improving patient outcomes in busy ICUs.
    • Applications:
      • CETUS x12: Features 12-lead ECG, arrhythmia analysis, and pacemaker detection for comprehensive monitoring.
      • Vigo Vitals: Integrates with wireless devices to provide proactive decision support via algorithms.
  5. 5G-Enabled Smart ICUs
    • Description: 5G technology supports real-time data transmission for smart wards, enabling remote robotic surgery, expert consultations, and IoT device integration.
    • Promise: High-speed, low-latency 5G enhances interactivity, allowing remote adjustments to equipment and real-time condition monitoring, potentially transforming ICU efficiency. However, its full benefits require further validation.,
    • Applications:
      • Remote Guidance: 5G enables experts to guide complex procedures remotely.
      • IoT Integration: Supports real-time data from multiple devices for intelligent prediction and alarms.
  6. Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) Tools
    • Description: Low- and high-tech AAC tools, like communication boards and electronic devices, help mechanically ventilated patients communicate with staff and families.
    • Promise: AAC tools improve patient-centered care, reduce stress, and enhance outcomes by addressing communication barriers. They are particularly effective in resource-limited settings.
    • Applications:
      • Communication Boards: Used in Sri Lankan ICUs to facilitate patient-nurse interactions.
      • Electronic AAC: Customizable tools improve engagement despite initial staff concerns about workflow integration.
  7. Electronic ICU Diaries
    • Description: Digital diaries integrated into electronic health records (EHRs) allow families and staff to record daily events, reducing stress and aiding patient recovery.
    • Promise: These diaries mitigate psychological trauma, improve family engagement, and may become standard in EHR systems, enhancing patient-centered care.
    • Applications:
      • Kaiser Permanente’s Prototype: An electronic diary exported to medical records, accessible via patient portals, showed high acceptability.
  8. Frugal Innovations for Resource-Limited Settings
    • Description: Low-cost technologies, such as AI-based monitoring systems (<$300 per ICU room) and reusable ventilatory devices, address ICU challenges in LMICs.
    • Promise: These innovations expand ICU capacity, reduce costs, and improve care quality in constrained environments, with potential global applicability.,
    • Applications:
      • AI Monitoring: Sensing technology with AI monitors patients at a fraction of traditional costs.
      • Frugal Ventilators: Designed for durability in extreme conditions, with user-friendly interfaces.

We love to hate these!!! What will Mervyn discuss?

Notably, systematic data collection has driven quality improvement in ICUs. Regular audits, like those conducted by the UK’s Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre (ICNARC), have identified gaps in care, such as variations in ventilator settings, and spurred standardized protocols. A 2024 ICNARC report showed that hospitals using audit data to refine practices saw a 10% reduction in ICU mortality over five years. So, here are some that have catalysed or introduced enhanced evidence based care:

ICNARC Case Mix Programme (CMP) Enhancements

The Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre (ICNARC) in the UK continues to lead with its Case Mix Programme (CMP), which audits patient outcomes in adult critical care units. Recent innovations include:

ICNARC Case Mix Programme

Irish National ICU Audit (INICUA)

The Irish National ICU Audit (INICUA), managed by the National Office of Clinical Audit (NOCA), is a quality and safety initiative benchmarking Irish ICUs against international standards. Key innovations in 2025 include:

NOCA Irish National ICU Audit

Integration of AI and Technology in Audits (More above)

Technology is transforming ICU audits, with AI and digital tools streamlining data collection and analysis:

Here are some handy links!

Quality Indicators and Standardised Bundles

The Royal College of Anaesthetists’ Audit Recipe Book (ARB) and the Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine (FICM) have introduced standardized audit bundles for 2025:

Improving Quality in ICU through Clinical Audit

CMS Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program Updates

In the US, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) IQR program for 2025 introduces audit innovations for ICUs:

CMS 2025 IQR Requirements

6. Clinical Audit Conference 2025

The Clinical Audit Conference 2025, hosted by Government Events, emphasizes innovative auditing practices:

Clinical Audit Conference 2025

While anarchy traditionally refers to the absence of hierarchical authority, in this case, it could describe situations where protocolled care—intended to standardise and improve patient outcomes—leads to chaotic or suboptimal results due to inflexibility, misapplication, or systemic failures.What could our eminent professor talk about in the context go ICU then?

Over-Reliance on Protocols Leading to Reduced Clinical Judgment

2. Heterogeneity in Protocol Implementation Across Global ITUs

Protocol Overload and Staff Burnout

Iatrogenic Harm from Rigid Protocols

Conflict Between Protocols and Patient-Centered Care

Anarchist Perspectives on Protocolled Care

7. Technological and AI-Driven Protocols Exacerbating Chaos

Many recent studies in critical care medicine were anticipated to change clinical practice, but did not yield the expected positive results. We seem to live in a world where the negative trial dominates. Are we striving for ‘over-positivity’? There are so many we could pick on, what could Merv discuss? I have picked a couple as examples:

Negative Aspects of Negative Trials in ICU

  1. Missed Opportunities for Improved Care
    Negative trials test interventions expected to improve critical outcomes, such as mortality or recovery time. When they fail, patients lose potential benefits. For example, the ACTT-2 trial (2020) found that baricitinib plus remdesivir reduced recovery time in COVID-19 patients but did not significantly lower mortality, disappointing hopes for a game-changing therapy in severe cases.
  2. Resource and Time Wastage
    Large ICU trials require significant resources, including funding, staff, and patient recruitment. Negative results, like those from the ACTT-2 trial, mean these resources might have been better directed elsewhere, delaying progress in finding effective treatments for critically ill patients.
  3. Clinician and Patient Disappointment
    Negative findings can frustrate ICU teams and patients’ families who anticipate new solutions. The ACTT-2 trial’s lack of mortality benefit for baricitinib (2020) dampened enthusiasm for immunomodulatory therapies in COVID-19, potentially reducing confidence in similar research efforts.
  4. Potential Harm from Early Adoption
    Before trial results are confirmed, some ICUs may adopt interventions based on early promise. Negative trials, like the SOS-Ventilation trial (no benefit from immediate sedation interruption, 2017), reveal that such practices may be ineffective or harmful, requiring a return to standard care and posing risks to patients in the interim.

Positive Aspects of Negative Trials in ICU

  1. Preventing Harmful Practices
    Negative trials protect patients by identifying ineffective or potentially harmful interventions. The ACTT-2 trial’s finding that baricitinib didn’t reduce mortality (2020) prevented its overuse in ICU settings, ensuring resources focus on therapies with proven benefits.
  2. Refining Clinical Practice
    Negative results clarify what doesn’t work, streamlining ICU protocols. For instance, the PERSONALIZED ARDS trial (2021) showed personalized ventilation didn’t outperform standard low-tidal-volume ventilation, reinforcing the latter’s role and reducing unnecessary variations in care.
  3. Guiding Future Research
    Negative trials highlight areas for further study. The ACTT-2 trial’s neutral mortality outcome (2020) suggested that baricitinib’s benefits might be limited to specific patient groups, prompting research into targeted immunomodulation strategies for severe COVID-19.
  4. Improving Trial Design and Patient Selection
    Negative trials often expose design flaws, such as patient misclassification (e.g., 21% in the PERSONALIZED ARDS trial). These insights lead to better inclusion criteria and study methodologies, improving the reliability of future ICU research.
  5. Advancing Evidence-Based Medicine
    By rigorously testing hypotheses, negative trials strengthen the evidence base. The SOS-Ventilation trial (2017) showed immediate sedation interruption wasn’t universally beneficial, promoting individualised sedation strategies and ensuring ICU care remains data-driven.

Negative ICU trials can be discouraging, as they delay breakthroughs and consume resources, but they are critical for patient safety and scientific advancement. They prevent the adoption of ineffective treatments, refine clinical and research approaches, and uphold evidence-based medicine. In the high-stakes ICU, where precision is vital, negative trials like ACTT-2 ensure only effective interventions reach patients while guiding smarter future studies.

Another poignant “Not-So-Good” consequence Mervyn may address, is the loss of the ‘firm’ structure and ‘love’ amongst colleagues in medicine. The traditional firm model, where teams worked closely under a senior consultant, fostered camaraderie and mentorship. Today’s shift-based systems, while improving work-life balance, have eroded these bonds, leaving many clinicians feeling isolated

This is perhaps far less of an issue within the 4 walls of ICU, but it is definitely an issue out there on the wards! Many of our trainees, who are non-anaesthesia based, may be coming directly out of this sort of environment. So, we need to foster and nurture them…similarly, we don’t want to be over-sickly regarding the far more stable team based environment within the ‘Ivory Tower’ of ICU. Sending them back after their ICU rotations full of dread, is not the aim! With knowledge of the isolation out there, a sympathetic ear is needed when in receipt of a less than decent referral. They have probably been juggling far too many plates out there, are seeing them drop around them, with little backup!

Summary

Merv is likely to leave us all thinking about where we have been, and where we are today. Hopefully, we will get a balanced perspective: immense pride in ICU advancements like reduced iatrogenic harm, earlier interventions, and multidisciplinary care, but also a sobering recognition of challenges like protocol-driven antibiotic overuse, the pitfalls of EHRs, and the loss of collegial bonds. He is likely to emphasise the mantra of personalised, human-centered approaches to critical care; one that leverages technology and audits, without losing sight of the bedside and the team spirit that once defined medicine.

See you at SOA25!

JW

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