Medical conditions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Medical conditions are used to describe a patient's conditions in a hospital. These terms are most commonly used by the news media and are rarely used by doctors in their daily business, preferring to deal with medical problems in greater detail.

A common progression might look like this:

Critical condition 
High risk of death without continuous intervention or life support
Serious condition 
reduced risk of death within 24 hours, but requiring frequent observation
Fair condition 
no major fluctuation in vital signs
Good condition 
little significant injury; patient may be discharged shortly

However, a range of different terms are used, including things like, grave condition, extremely critical condition, critical but stable condition, serious but stable condition, satisfactory condition, and others. Typically, stable is not a condition on its own; it needs to be qualified with a true condition.

The use of such conditions in the US media has increased since the passing of the HIPPA in 1996. Patient privacy has become more of a concern to doctors and hospitals, and they are less likely to release specific medical conditions, fearing litigious patients.

Definitions vary among hospitals, and it is even possible for a patient to be upgraded or downgraded simply by being moved from one place to another, with no change in actual physical state. Furthermore, medical science is a highly complex discipline dealing with complicated and often overlapping threats to life and well-being. With perhaps a dozen professionals, each with their own perspective and opinion, overseeing a single patient, it is common to have many varied though still valid assessments concerning a patient's immediate condition.

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