ince the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM) partnered to establish the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC), the combination of evidence-based consensus guidelines and patient care bundles have informed and driven better care, and consequently improved outcomes for patients with sepsis and septic shock. While guidelines apply the robust GRADE methods to appraise published evidence and develop key recommendations, bundles are designed to facilitate implementation of the optimal care outlined in the guidelines (1). The latest update to the SSC guidelines published in Critical Care Medicine and Intensive Care Medicine (2, 3) represents the state-of-the-art in knowledge and care processes for patients with sepsis. Some readers may be surprised that SSC care bundles, such as the Hour-1 Bundle, are not addressed in the latest SSC guidelines. Because bundles are developed through a separate process from the guidelines (2), the Hour-1 Bundle remains in place as the foremost tool to deliver the right care at the right time (Right Care, Right Now™) for patients with sepsis and septic shock.Just as guidelines evolve with the discovery of new knowledge, bundle refinement is subject to the same evolution. The Hour-1 Bundle for initial resuscitation of patients with sepsis and septic shock illustrates the process (4). Controversy regarding when the first hour begins was refined with key input from emergency medicine and infectious disease colleagues from time of triage to time of sepsis recognition, while concerns about the volume of fluid resuscitation were addressed in a collaborative report driven by the American College of Emergency Physicians with multi-professional input, including representatives from SCCM and the Infectious Diseases Society of America (5). Gathering vital input from the broader healthcare community to ensure the highest quality care is illustrated by the global SSC approach to integrating new knowledge to produce successively updated COVID-19 patient management guidelines (6). As a reflection of collaborative partnership, broadened community inclusion, and critical appraisal of the available evidence, professional medical organizations who did not endorse the 2016 SSC sepsis guidelines are now signatories to the latest guideline.As the co-conveners of the SSC, the SCCM and the ESICM support the SSC guidelines, the Hour-1 Bundle, and the array of tools the SSC has deployed to improve the care of patients with sepsis and septic shock. The guidelines are produced in several languages, and the tools are shared for implementation in a wide variety of settings. The SCCM and the ESICM support the development of context and resource-specific care bundles to globally improve sepsis care and recognize the importance of setting aspirational goals to achieve the