Leading Journals In Pediatric Critical Care

 While writing this manuscript, a orientation search cruised on PubMed® without strict criteria showed that the humanization of healthcare is at the foundation of 224 papers of which 69 have been distributed during the last 5 years, and barely 2 are clinical or comparison trials. If we look this same search on Google®, the number of results obtained is 254,000 that agrees not only to scientific papers, but also to unfounded studies that enhance value to this attitude beyond objectivity. In the pediatric setting, the attitude shown toward the patient would be called, in the adult setting, humanized. The presence of family members, their participation in the care provided, the immediacy to the patient, or the interpretation of signs and symptoms beyond pain, fever, or clinical complications are common practices in the neonatal or pediatric intensivist setting. To some range the new road faced by the adult population is already happening in our setting. In an attempt to construction this point of view, several scientific societies have established the development of a dynamic flight plan that should allow the expansion of humanization in the context of critically ill patients. Thus, based on the Humanization Plan of Intensive Care Units of the Community of Madrid published back in 2016, our paper outlines and defines the strategic lines upon which the application and development of human care in the management of critically ill patients should be built.1 This manuscript should be taken as no protocol or flight plan and all these strategic lines should be potted and modified to the pediatric setting.  

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