Premium Only Content
ICAH Melbourne Networking Event (August 2024)
https://intensivecareathome.com/intensive-care-at-home-melbourne-networking-event-august-2024/
INTENSIVE CARE AT HOME Melbourne Networking Event (August 2024)
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/ICUhotline
Twitter: https://twitter.com/icuhotline
Song: Jarico - Island Music
supported by@FreeBackgroundMusicForCreators
#BackgroundMusicWithoutLimitations
https://bit.ly/2XoXFnb
#icu
#intensivecare
#criticalcare
Patrik: First off, I also want to thank the people that are not here today, because we have our nurses on the road doing a lot of the hard work. We have our admin team working remotely, keeping everything going, because without them, we wouldn’t be here today. And without them, we couldn’t be serving our clients in the community.
Thanks to everyone coming here today. So, I started this journey with Intensive Care at Home way back when. Some of you might know I am a critical care nurse by background. I was doing my nurse training in Germany way back when, and I started working in ICU immediately after my nurse training, really enjoyed it in there. Then, I heard about this start-up company in the early 2000s in Germany that was similar to Intensive Care at Home in Munich, and I thought, “Well, that sounds exciting. That is something that I’m very interested in.”
I joined them as an employee at the time, and we were the first ones in Germany launching Intensive Care at Home. We were actively recruiting patients from ICU going home predominantly with ventilation and tracheostomy. I did that for a couple of years, was one of my best experiences that I had in terms of my nursing career.
Then, I went overseas. I worked in the U.K. in ICU, and then I came to Australia in 2005, went back into ICU, worked in Sydney, worked in Perth, worked in Melbourne. All I could see in ICU in Australia was patients that we would’ve looked after at home in Germany. That’s all I was seeing. I said to doctors, I said to nurses, “Well, this patient would be at home in Germany,” and people say, “Oh, that wouldn’t be possible.” I said, “Well, we’ve done it. It’s happening in Europe already.”
So, that was for me. Then, I had a look around in Australia, is anything happening here that is of a similar nature? I couldn’t find it. Which then eventually led me to the path, “Okay, well let’s fill this niche. Let’s fill this need for Intensive Care at Home.”
Now, I had no idea in the early days who would fund it, no idea where the money was coming from, but I knew there was a need. I knew someone would be paying for this. That was in 2011, 2012 when I started the business. I had no idea that the NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme) would be a thing one day. I had no idea where the money would be coming from, but lo and behold, I was knocking at doors. I got the service accredited, starting to knock at doors, and I found many closed doors in the beginning. People were saying, “Oh, you can’t do Intensive Care at Home.” I said, “Oh, we’ve been doing it in Europe for the last 5 years. There’s no reason why it couldn’t happen here.”
So eventually, some people within the industry were warming up to the idea. It looks like after a couple of years of knocking on doors, some doors were opening, mainly with the TAC (Transport Accident Commission) at the time. There were some clients that the TAC identified could benefit from our service. We got in front of the first TAC client in probably 2013, 2014, who was a C1 spinal injury client, ventilated, tracheostomy. He got back to ICU almost weekly. He had a team of support workers and general registered nurses, but they couldn’t keep him home predictably. So, the TAC was funding our service in the early days, and we put a stop to that immediately.
When we worked with the client, he never went back to ICU ever. We proved our model pretty quickly within a few months really. It wasn’t without challenges in the beginning, as you can imagine.
Continue reading at: https://intensivecareathome.com/intensive-care-at-home-melbourne-networking-event-august-2024/
-
12:10
Intensive Care at Home
11 days agoCan INTENSIVE CARE AT HOME Look After PICC Lines and Nasogastric Tubes at Home?
81 -
DVR
Wahzdee
1 hour agoAm I Too Old to Keep Up? 🤔🎮 - Warzone Early Mornings! S1E3
10.6K1 -
1:19:40
Steve-O's Wild Ride! Podcast
6 days ago $0.95 earnedThe Crazy Story Of How Steve-O Hired His Ranch Hand - Wild Ride #248
10.6K22 -
LIVE
AtrociousTV
1 hour agoBack on the Tarkov Wipe Grind #MAGA #RUMBLE
248 watching -
2:08:48
Matt Kohrs
14 hours agoStocks Bounce, Breaking News & Day Trading Strategy Explained || The MK Show
40.2K2 -
15:33
Russell Brand
22 hours agoRemember this?!
220K380 -
1:23:20
2 MIKES LIVE
2 hours agoTHE MIKE SCHWARTZ SHOW with DR. MICHAEL J SCHWARTZ 01-02-2025
18.4K2 -
58:34
themidwesterner
1 hour ago $0.24 earnedMecosta Co, MI reverses support for CCP Gotion battery plant
8.18K2 -
3:10:39
GoodLawgic
14 hours agoThe Following Program: GREAT Lawgic Joins To Discuss Domestic Terrorism in 2025
152K88 -
1:05:48
Mikhaila Peterson
6 days agoDoctor On The Carnivore Diet and Fertility | Robert Kiltz EP 218
109K36