We read with interest the multicenter observational study evaluating tele-ICU-enabled early recognition of in-hospital hemodynamic events and associated outcomes. 1The work is timely because it frames tele-ICU as a hospital-wide safety layer, a potentially scalable response to intensivist scarcity and variable bedside expertise, relevant well beyond India.We propose that the next step for the field is to move from detection to assurance, demonstrating that tele-ICU surveillance is not only earlier, but also consistently actionable, auditable, and equitable across wards and resource settings.A practical way to operationalize this is to report a minimum viable safety dataset (MVSD) for hemodynamic alerting, enabling cross-site comparison and meta-learning without requiring identical technologies.The MVSD could include: (i) alert definition and thresholds; (ii) signal quality/ missingness and artifact handling; (iii) verification workflow (who confirms, within what time); (iv) the first downstream action linked to the alert fluids, vasopressor initiation/titration, escalation to intensive care unit (ICU)/rapid response team (RRT) activation; and (v) balancing measures (alarm burden, override rates, unintended escalation, and clinician workload).Standardized reporting matters because remote monitoring evidence is heterogeneous across tools and workflows, limiting transferability when "what exactly was done" is unclear. 2 Two additional elements would strengthen future tele-ICU evaluations for IJCCM readers.First, workflow and human-factors outcomes should be treated as primary results (not appendices), consistent with DECIDE-AI's emphasis on early/live clinical evaluation of decision support systems. 3 Second, generalizability and bias risk should be explicitly assessed using contemporary standards such as TRIPOD+AI and PROBAST+AI, which increasingly define what editors and reviewers consider deployable evidence. 4,5 Finally, we suggest one globally meaningful metric to add to future studies: Time-to-first-beneficial-action, stratified by ward type and resource level.This directly tests whether tele-ICU improves patient-centered outcomes without widening inequities in escalation or bedside response.In our view, such a decision-grade reporting spine would accelerate responsible scale-up of tele-ICU from innovation to patient-safety infrastructure.
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M Vijayasimha
Keerthi Rao
Pallav Mishra
Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine
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Vijayasimha et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e713fdcb99343efc98d609 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10071-25174