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Joseph Zalocha - Reduce Complications While Central Line Placements

Joseph Zalocha has extensive experience with CVC placement as the Director of Critical Care Services at Northside Hospital.  No matter the method used for CVC placement, without the proper hand hygiene and use of sterile barriers like masks, gowns, and gloves, the rate of central line placement complications will continue to be an issue for hospitals. Joseph Zalocha - How to Avoid Central Line Placement Complications     Follow Joseph Zalocha at Below Profiles: https://www.healthgrades.com/physician/dr-joseph-zalocha-w8rjq https://www.behance.net/josephzalocha https://www.crunchbase.com/person/joe-zalocha 

Joseph Zalocha: Understanding Ventilator Management

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Throughout his career, Joseph Zalocha has witnessed many advancements in the treatment of ICU patients and the equipment used to help improve ICU patient health, getting them out of intensive care sooner. As the Director of ICU at Northside Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida, he has long been interested in improving ventilator management and other critical organ support functions. Ventilator management focuses on the initiating, monitoring, and adjusting ventilators according to what the patient’s medical condition is and how they are responding to treatment. It requires selecting the right ventilator mode and settings and changing them as needed. In critical care settings, like the ICU, a respiratory therapist, under the direction of the doctor, will handle the ventilator management. They must work together with the nurses to provide the highest level of care for the patient.    The first thing that needs to be determined in ventilation management is what mode will

Joseph Zalocha: What is Critical Care Medicine?

Joseph Zalocha is a Critical Care physician working at Northside Hospital in the St. Petersburg, Florida area. After medical school and before he started his first residency, Dr. Zalocha was junior faculty for Ross University in Miami for a year. He taught third-year medical students how to take and pass their clinical exams. When he started his residency, it was in Internal Medicine at Orlando Regional Medical Center. After three years there and a few more stops along the way, Dr. Zalocha was eventually recruited to be the director of Critical Care at Northside Hospital. He was also recently “elected… to Medical Executive Committee (MEC) of Northside Hospital as treasure[r]/secretary,” where he maintains the medical staff fund. Joseph Zalocha wanted to work in Critical Care because he wanted to be on the front lines of helping people recover from life-threatening conditions and diseases. Dr. Zalocha is in charge of diagnosing and managing life-threatening conditions that re

Joseph Zalocha: What is ARDS?

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Joseph Zalocha is in charge of an Intensive Care Unit at Northside Hospital in the St. Petersburg, Florida area. He also works for a contracted group called EMCare, for which he covers “inpatient service at Largo Hospital, Doctor’s Hospital in Sarasota, [Florida], Northside Hospital, and Oak Hill Hospital in Springhill, [Florida].” As an ICU physician, Dr. Zalocha deals with a high number of patients suffering from Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome, or ARDS. This occurs when the lungs’ alveoli—tiny, elastic air sacs—fill up with fluid. This fluid prevents some oxygen from getting to the bloodstream and deprives organs from what they need to do their jobs. Usually, Joseph Zalocha has seen ARDS develop in patients who are already seriously ill. It is a common disease for patients in the ICU for various reasons. But under Dr. Zalocha’s watch, the syndrome is preventable and monitored closely to avoid complications. Dr. Zalocha and his teams work to prevent this disease from t

Joseph Zalocha: Important Factors in Advanced Ventilator Management

Joseph Zalocha , as the director of the Intensive Care Unit at Northside Hospital in the St. Petersburg, Florida area, has long been interested in finding new ways to improve ventilator management and other critical organ support functions that he works with on a regular basis. Over his career, many advancements in ICU treatment and equipment have been made to improve patient health in the ICU and to get them out of intensive care treatment sooner. One focus of these improvements has been in ventilator management. When researchers work on improving this technology, they focus on a few key factors to help doctors and patients.  Joseph Zalocha has been interested in helping improve his patients’ comfort level in the ICU. This helps them relax and lets their bodies react as normally as possible to treatment without stress hormones flowing through the body and other interferences. Ventilators in recent years have been made to improve gas exchanges between the body and the machine

Joseph Zalocha: Fluid Management of Neurocritical Patients

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Joseph Zalocha is the Director of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) at the Northside Hospital in the St. Petersburg, Florida area. Joseph Zalocha also manages inpatient services for several other hospitals in the area. As the treasurer for the Medical Executive Council for Northside Hospital, Dr. Zalocha is heavily involved in how the medical fund is used to treat patients and prevent complications, especially in the ICU. Over his long career in the medical field and in helping patients, Dr. Zalocha has become an expert in managing patients with serious neurological problems.   Managing the maintenance fluids for a neurocritical patient is a routine part of the Intensive Care Unit’s duty for physicians like Joseph Zalocha. The amount of fluid infused and the kind of tonicity of the maintenance fluids are critical to understanding how a neurocritical patient will respond to treatment. The impact of these fluids on patients with secondary brain injuries can be huge. Recently,

Joseph Zalocha: Why Ultrasound Guidance on Internal Jugular Access is Important

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Joseph Zalocha is an expert in critical and intensive care. As the director of critical care at Northside Hospital in the St. Petersburg, Florida area, Dr. Zalocha has been in charge of many complicated operations and treatments for emergency situations and life-threatening conditions and diseases. Since the ICU is there to give doctors the best possible way to administer invasive monitoring and operate complex organ support systems, Dr. Zalocha, as the director of this unit, has had to administer ultrasound monitoring to get at the source of many kinds of maladies. Ultrasound-guided central venous access is an extremely complicated procedure that he has had to perform.  Joseph Zalocha has performed central venous cannulation, which is very important and useful for emergency medicine. After this procedure, multiple actions can be taken to help the patient in a life-or-death situation, such as the administration of blood products, nutritional fluids, vasoactive drugs, and oth