| CG50 |
Acutely ill patients in hospital (CG50) |
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Recognition of and response to acute illness in adults in hospital
Sometimes, the health of a patient in hospital may get worse suddenly (this is called becoming acutely ill). There are certain times when this is more likely, for example following an emergency admission to hospital, after surgery and after leaving critical care. However, it can happen at any stage of an illness. It increases the patient's risk of needing to stay longer in hospital, not recovering fully or dying.
Monitoring patients (checking them and their health) regularly while they are in hospital and taking action if they show signs of becoming worse can help avoid serious problems.
The NICE clinical guideline describes how patients in acute hospitals should be monitored to help identify those whose health becomes worse and how they should be cared for if this happens.
The advice in the guideline covers:
- all adult patients in hospital, including patients in the emergency department being admitted to hospital and those being moved between departments.
It does not specifically look at the care of:
- children
- patients in critical care areas, for example in an intensive care or high dependency unit
- people who are having treatment for symptoms and pain in the final stages of a terminal illness.
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Other information
How this guidance was produced
Background information
- None found
This page was last updated: 26 May 2011
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Guideline formats
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Implementation tools and resources
- Audit support
- Costing report
- Costing template
- Slide set
- CG50 Acutely ill patients in hospital: implementation advice
See this guidance in practice
Patient
The summary of the key recommendations in the guidance written for patients, carers and those with little medical knowledge and may be used in local patient information leaflets.
Quick Reference Guide
The quick reference guide presents recommendations for health professionals
NICE Guideline
The published NICE clinical guideline, contains the recommendations for health professionals and NHS bodies.
Full Guideline
The published full clinical guideline for specialists with background, evidence, recommendations and methods used.


