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  2. Clinical death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_death

    A patient with working heart and lungs who is determined to be brain dead can be pronounced legally dead without clinical death occurring. However, some courts have been reluctant to impose such a determination over the religious objections of family members, such as in the Jesse Koochin case. [ 30 ]

  3. Case fatality rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_fatality_rate

    In epidemiology, case fatality rate (CFR) – or sometimes more accurately case-fatality risk – is the proportion of people who have been diagnosed with a certain disease and end up dying of it. Unlike a disease's mortality rate , the CFR does not take into account the time period between disease onset and death.

  4. Risk of mortality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_of_mortality

    The risk of mortality (ROM) provides a medical classification to estimate the likelihood of in-hospital death for a patient. The ROM classes are minor, moderate, major, and extreme. The ROM class is used for the evaluation of patient mortality.

  5. Brain death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_death

    Brain death; Other names: Brain stem death: A brain-dead patient. The patient can also be seen here executing the Lazarus sign. Specialty: Neurology, neurosurgery, palliative care, critical care medicine: Complications: Total organ failure: Causes: Cardiac arrest, myocardial infarction, stroke, blood clot: Diagnostic method: Stimulation testing ...

  6. Hazard ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazard_ratio

    The hazard ratio would be 2, indicating a higher hazard of death from the treatment. To illustrate how hazard ratio is linked to projected risk: in a population where the incidence of a disease is 10% by age 65 (eg: Dementia [1] [2]), a hazard ratio of 4.42 [3] (eg: Aripiprazole medication) results in an expected incidence of 37.3% by age 65. [4]

  7. Patient safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_safety

    Studies by Aiken and Needleman have demonstrated that patient death, nosocomial infections, cardiac arrest, and pressure ulcers are linked to inadequate nurse-to-patient ratios. [ 123 ] [ 124 ] The presence or absence of registered nurses (RNs) impacts the outcome for pediatric patients requiring pain management and/or peripheral administration ...

  8. Perioperative mortality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perioperative_mortality

    Of operative risk factors, surgical site is the most important predictor of risk for PPCs (aortic, thoracic, and upper abdominal surgeries being the highest-risk procedures, even in healthy patients. [16] The value of preoperative testing, such as spirometry, to estimate pulmonary risk is of controversial value and is debated in medical literature.

  9. Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_hypothermic...

    In the trials, patients who experience clinical death for less than five minutes duration from blood loss are being cooled from normal body temperature of 37 °C to less than 10 °C by pumping a large quantity of ice-cold saline into the largest blood vessel of the body .