Clinical meaning
Critical care nursing involves the care of patients with life-threatening, potentially reversible conditions requiring continuous monitoring, advanced interventions, and rapid clinical decision-making. While the practical nurse scope in critical care settings varies by jurisdiction, all practical nurses must be able to recognize early signs of clinical deterioration, initiate appropriate emergency responses, and support the interprofessional critical care team. The physiological basis of critical illness involves failure or impending failure of one or more organ systems, most commonly respiratory failure (inability to maintain adequate oxygenation or ventilation), cardiovascular failure (shock states with inadequate tissue perfusion), neurological failure (altered consciousness, seizures, increased intracranial pressure), renal failure (acute kidney injury with oliguria and metabolic derangement), and hepatic failure. Early warning scoring systems (such as the Modified Early Warning Score -- MEWS, or National Early Warning Score -- NEWS) use vital sign parameters to identify patients at risk of deterioration before overt crisis occurs. The practical nurse must understand the significance of abnormal vital sign trends, recognize shock states (hypovolemic, cardiogenic, distributive, obstructive), initiate basic life support, and communicate urgency effectively using standardized tools.