AHA tries to tackle shifting critical cardiac care needs
Pioneering UC cardiologist weighs in on new statement
Since the concept first emerged in 1961, critical care cardiology has transformed cardiac care. A new scientific statement from the American Heart Association highlights the evolution of the specialty and the challenges faced in today’s rapidly changing health care environment. The new statement serves as an update to a 2012 statement and was published Feb. 13 in the journal Circulation.
Richard Becker, MD, a professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and director and physician-in-chief of the UC Heart, Lung and Vascular Institute, was among the first cardiologists in the country to practice critical care cardiology and to develop fellowship training programs.
“This field has evolved significantly since the 1960s, when coronary care units were first established to manage acute myocardial infarction and ventricular arrhythmias,” he recently told MedCentral. “This represented a sea change at that time.”
These changes, including the development of specialized cardiac intensive care units (CICUs), have significantly improved patient outcomes, he added.
However, as the field has grown, so have the challenges. Patients are older, with more comorbidities, and many have non-cardiac primary diagnoses, such as sepsis, acute kidney injury and acute respiratory failure.
That shift “has required a multidisciplinary approach to care, integrating advanced cardiovascular interventions and critical care expertise," said Becker.
Read about how Becker said primary care physicians play an integral role in critical cardiac care.
Featured image at top: iStock/Rasi Bhadramani.
Related Stories
Using GLP-1s for weight loss, maintenance after bariatric surgery
March 5, 2026
Bariatric surgery has become a cornerstone treatment for severe obesity and its related comorbidities, offering superior long-term efficacy compared with lifestyle and pharmacologic interventions alone. Yet persistent clinical gaps remain in a subset of patients, including insufficient weight loss and postoperative weight regain.
UC marketing class featured in Super Bowl Ad Meter School Spotlight
March 4, 2026
University of Cincinnati’s Lindner College of Business was one of just 16 institutions representing USA Today’s Ad Meter School Spotlight program, where students got to evaluate the ads and publish their findings alongside industry professionals. The students' top-rated commercials largely aligned with Ad Meter’s official rankings, with Budweiser's "American Icons" earning the highest score. The participants included over 300 students across two marketing classes taught by assistant professor-educator Summer Shelton. She came to the University from a marketing research firm and brings experience ranking Super Bowl commercials as an industry professional herself.
UC leaders recognized for excellence in technology leadership
March 4, 2026
University of Cincinnati Vice President & Chief Digital Officer Bharath Prabhakaran was named a finalist in the nonprofit/public sector category for the National ORBIE Awards 2026, in rapid succession to last year’s nomination, where Prabhakaran was named the 2025 Ohio CIO Enterprise ORBIE winner.