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V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic

INTRODUCTION: The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in nearly 2 million patients being put on waiting lists for elective procedures in the UK. We aim to describe how the COVID-19 Algorithm for Resuming Elective Surgery (CARES) was used to allocate patients to elective theatre lists while factoring in patie...

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Autores principales: Ahmed, Marriam, Ponniah, Hariharan Subbiah, Edwards, Thomas, Liddle, Alexander, Cobb, Justin, Dean, Elizabeth, Clark, Callum, Logishetty, Kartik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8030145/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab034.006
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author Ahmed, Marriam
Ponniah, Hariharan Subbiah
Edwards, Thomas
Liddle, Alexander
Cobb, Justin
Dean, Elizabeth
Clark, Callum
Logishetty, Kartik
author_facet Ahmed, Marriam
Ponniah, Hariharan Subbiah
Edwards, Thomas
Liddle, Alexander
Cobb, Justin
Dean, Elizabeth
Clark, Callum
Logishetty, Kartik
author_sort Ahmed, Marriam
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in nearly 2 million patients being put on waiting lists for elective procedures in the UK. We aim to describe how the COVID-19 Algorithm for Resuming Elective Surgery (CARES) was used to allocate patients to elective theatre lists while factoring in patient safety, risk to healthcare workers and, protection of resources. METHODOLOGY: A multidisciplinary team was employed with the task of using CARES to allocate theatre slots to 1169 patients on the waiting list. CARES was used in conjunction with an evidence-based scale for procedural urgency (Levels 1-4) to stratify patients and list them for surgery at one of three ‘COVID-light’ sites i.e. 1. With HDU/ITU access, specialist staff, and equipment, 2. An NHS short-stay surgical unit, 3. A private surgical unit. Incidence of post-operative Covid-19 infection was assessed by looking at positive Covid-19 RT-PCR or CT Chest with characteristic findings performed within 2 weeks of the surgery. RESULTS: 118 cases were deemed to be Priority 1/2, 222 were Level 3, and 808 were Level 4. In 6 weeks, 355 surgeries were performed, with Urgent and Level 1/2 cases performed soonest (mean 18 days, p < 0.001). 33 high-risk/complex/paediatric patients had surgery at Site 1 and the rest at Sites 2 and 3. No patients contracted COVID-19 within 2 weeks of surgery. CONCLUSION: CARES’ holistic approach enabled equitable and safe resumption of arthroplasty during the pandemic, by stratification and creation of COVID-light sites. It could be applied internationally and across sub-specialties. INTRODUCTION: The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in nearly 2 million patients being put on waiting lists for elective procedures in the UK. We aim to describe how the COVID-19 Algorithm for Resuming Elective Surgery (CARES) was used to allocate patients to elective theatre lists while factoring in patient safety, risk to healthcare workers and, protection of resources. METHODOLOGY: A multidisciplinary team was employed with the task of using CARES to allocate theatre slots to 1169 patients on the waiting list. CARES was used in conjunction with an evidence-based scale for procedural urgency (Levels 1-4) to stratify patients and list them for surgery at one of three ‘COVID-light’ sites i.e. 1. With HDU/ITU access, specialist staff, and equipment, 2. An NHS short-stay surgical unit, 3. A private surgical unit. Incidence of post-operative Covid-19 infection was assessed by looking at positive Covid-19 RT-PCR or CT Chest with characteristic findings performed within 2 weeks of the surgery. RESULTS: 118 cases were deemed to be Priority 1/2, 222 were Level 3, and 808 were Level 4. In 6 weeks, 355 surgeries were performed, with Urgent and Level 1/2 cases performed soonest (mean 18 days, p < 0.001). 33 high-risk/complex/paediatric patients had surgery at Site 1 and the rest at Sites 2 and 3. No patients contracted COVID-19 within 2 weeks of surgery. CONCLUSION: CARES’ holistic approach enabled equitable and safe resumption of arthroplasty during the pandemic, by stratification and creation of COVID-light sites. It could be applied internationally and across sub-specialties.
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spelling pubmed-80301452021-04-13 V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic Ahmed, Marriam Ponniah, Hariharan Subbiah Edwards, Thomas Liddle, Alexander Cobb, Justin Dean, Elizabeth Clark, Callum Logishetty, Kartik BJS Open Video Presentation INTRODUCTION: The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in nearly 2 million patients being put on waiting lists for elective procedures in the UK. We aim to describe how the COVID-19 Algorithm for Resuming Elective Surgery (CARES) was used to allocate patients to elective theatre lists while factoring in patient safety, risk to healthcare workers and, protection of resources. METHODOLOGY: A multidisciplinary team was employed with the task of using CARES to allocate theatre slots to 1169 patients on the waiting list. CARES was used in conjunction with an evidence-based scale for procedural urgency (Levels 1-4) to stratify patients and list them for surgery at one of three ‘COVID-light’ sites i.e. 1. With HDU/ITU access, specialist staff, and equipment, 2. An NHS short-stay surgical unit, 3. A private surgical unit. Incidence of post-operative Covid-19 infection was assessed by looking at positive Covid-19 RT-PCR or CT Chest with characteristic findings performed within 2 weeks of the surgery. RESULTS: 118 cases were deemed to be Priority 1/2, 222 were Level 3, and 808 were Level 4. In 6 weeks, 355 surgeries were performed, with Urgent and Level 1/2 cases performed soonest (mean 18 days, p < 0.001). 33 high-risk/complex/paediatric patients had surgery at Site 1 and the rest at Sites 2 and 3. No patients contracted COVID-19 within 2 weeks of surgery. CONCLUSION: CARES’ holistic approach enabled equitable and safe resumption of arthroplasty during the pandemic, by stratification and creation of COVID-light sites. It could be applied internationally and across sub-specialties. INTRODUCTION: The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in nearly 2 million patients being put on waiting lists for elective procedures in the UK. We aim to describe how the COVID-19 Algorithm for Resuming Elective Surgery (CARES) was used to allocate patients to elective theatre lists while factoring in patient safety, risk to healthcare workers and, protection of resources. METHODOLOGY: A multidisciplinary team was employed with the task of using CARES to allocate theatre slots to 1169 patients on the waiting list. CARES was used in conjunction with an evidence-based scale for procedural urgency (Levels 1-4) to stratify patients and list them for surgery at one of three ‘COVID-light’ sites i.e. 1. With HDU/ITU access, specialist staff, and equipment, 2. An NHS short-stay surgical unit, 3. A private surgical unit. Incidence of post-operative Covid-19 infection was assessed by looking at positive Covid-19 RT-PCR or CT Chest with characteristic findings performed within 2 weeks of the surgery. RESULTS: 118 cases were deemed to be Priority 1/2, 222 were Level 3, and 808 were Level 4. In 6 weeks, 355 surgeries were performed, with Urgent and Level 1/2 cases performed soonest (mean 18 days, p < 0.001). 33 high-risk/complex/paediatric patients had surgery at Site 1 and the rest at Sites 2 and 3. No patients contracted COVID-19 within 2 weeks of surgery. CONCLUSION: CARES’ holistic approach enabled equitable and safe resumption of arthroplasty during the pandemic, by stratification and creation of COVID-light sites. It could be applied internationally and across sub-specialties. Oxford University Press 2021-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8030145/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab034.006 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercialre-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Video Presentation
Ahmed, Marriam
Ponniah, Hariharan Subbiah
Edwards, Thomas
Liddle, Alexander
Cobb, Justin
Dean, Elizabeth
Clark, Callum
Logishetty, Kartik
V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic
title V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic
title_full V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic
title_fullStr V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic
title_full_unstemmed V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic
title_short V7 Project Restart’; Safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the Covid-19 pandemic
title_sort v7 project restart’; safe resumption of elective orthopaedic surgery following the covid-19 pandemic
topic Video Presentation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8030145/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab034.006
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