Bhangu, Aneel and Lawani, Ismail and Ng-Kamstra, Joshua S and Wang, Yanfeng and Chan, Albert and Futaba, Kaori and Ng, Simon and Ebele, Emery and Lederhuber, Hans and Tabiri, Stephen and Ghosh, Dhruv and Gallo, Gaetano and Pata, Francesco and Di Saverio, Salomone and Spinelli, Antonino and Medina, Antonio Ramos-De and Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O and Akinbode, Gbemisola and Ingabire, J C Allen and Ntirenganya, Faustin and Kamara, Thaim B and Goh, Minghui and Moore, Rachel and Kim, Hye Jin and Lee, Suk-Hwan and Minaya-Bravo, Ana and Abbott, Tom and Chakrabortee, Sohini and Denning, Max and Fitzgerald, J Edward and Glasbey, James and Griffiths, Ewen and Halkias, Constantine and Harrison, Ewen M and Jones, Conor S and Kinross, James and Lawday, Samuel and Li, Elizabeth and Markar, Sheraz and Morton, Dion G and Nepogodiev, Dmitri and Pinkney, Thomas D and Simoes, Joana and Warren, Oliver and Wong, Danny J N and Bankhead-Kendall, Brittany and Breen, Kerry A and Davidson, Giana H and Kaafarani, Haytham and Keller, Deborah S and Mazingi, Dennis and Kamarajah, Sivesh K and Blackwell, Sue and Dames, Nicola (2020) Global guidance for surgical care during the COVID-19 pandemic. British Journal of Surgery, 107 (9). pp. 1097-1103. ISSN 0007-1323
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Abstract
Abstract Background
Surgeons urgently need guidance on how to deliver surgical services safely and effectively during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim was to identify the key domains that should be considered when developing pandemic preparedness plans for surgical services.
Methods
A scoping search was conducted to identify published articles relating to management of surgical patients during pandemics. Key informant interviews were conducted with surgeons and anaesthetists with direct experience of working during infectious disease outbreaks, in order to identify key challenges and solutions to delivering effective surgical services during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Results
Thirteen articles were identified from the scoping search, and surgeons and anaesthetists representing 11 territories were interviewed. To mount an effective response to COVID-19, a pandemic response plan for surgical services should be developed in advance. Key domains that should be included are: provision of staff training (such as patient transfers, donning and doffing personal protection equipment, recognizing and managing COVID-19 infection); support for the overall hospital response to COVID-19 (reduction in non-urgent activities such as clinics, endoscopy, non-urgent elective surgery); establishment of a team-based approach for running emergency services; and recognition and management of COVID-19 infection in patients treated as an emergency and those who have had surgery. A backlog of procedures after the end of the COVID-19 pandemic is inevitable, and hospitals should plan how to address this effectively to ensure that patients having elective treatment have the best possible outcomes.
Conclusion
Hospitals should prepare detailed context-specific pandemic preparedness plans addressing the identified domains. Specific guidance should be updated continuously to reflect emerging evidence during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | COVID-19 |
Divisions: | Orthopaedic Surgery |
Depositing User: | Mr Repository Admin |
Date Deposited: | 05 Oct 2023 10:07 |
Last Modified: | 05 Oct 2023 10:07 |
URI: | https://ir.orthopaedicresearchgroup.com/id/eprint/103 |