Department of Surgery, Azienda Ospedaliera Marche Nord, Ospedale San Salvatore, Piazzale Cinelli 1, Pesaro-Fano, Italy.
Department of Clinical and Experimental Sciences, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy.
World J Emerg Surg. 2020 May 24;15(1):36. doi: 10.1186/s13017-020-00314-3.
COVID-19 pandemic has rapidly spread in Italy in late February 2020. Almost all surgical services have been reorganized, with the aim of maintaining an adequate therapeutic path, especially for surgical emergencies. The knowledge of how surgeons dealing with emergency surgery have reacted to the epidemic in the real life can be useful while drafting clinical recommendations.
Surgeons from multiple Italian regions were invited answering to an online survey in order to make a snapshot of their current behaviors towards COVID-19-positive patients bearing urgent surgical diseases. Questions about institutional rules and personal approach for patient treatment and to limit epidemic spread were included in a 37-item questionnaire.
Seventy-one questionnaires from institutions dealing with emergency surgery were accepted. Participating surgeons were equally subdivided from a geographical point of view, with a large proportion of public (97.2%) and non-academical (91.5%) centers. In 80.3% of cases, the hospitals treated COVID-19 patients; in 69.1% of centers, a change in work plan was necessary, and 33.8% of teams had almost a surgeon infected or in preventive quarantine. The vast majority of surgeons operated only on urgent cases (73.9%), but the number of interventions significantly dropped. Up to 40% of non-traumatic abdominal emergency cases had an unusual delayed treatment. The laparoscopic approach was used in 69.6% of interventions on COVID-19 patients. Strategies to protect health care workers against COVID-19 infection and to identify asymptomatic infected surgeons were suboptimal with respect to the WHO recommendations in 70.4% and 90.2% of centers, respectively. Advanced personal protective equipment for operating room workers was adopted for all surgeries in only 12.7% of centers.
This survey confirms that the COVID-19 outbreak is dramatically changing the practice of emergency surgery centers in Italy. Despite the reduction in number, urgent cases were on average more challenging owing to diagnostic delay. Recommendations from the International Scientific Societies are frequently not complied concerning the use of laparoscopic approach, the availability of personal protective equipment in the operating rooms, and the testing of both asymptomatic physicians and patients scheduled for surgery. A further evaluation of the short-term results of these attitudes is warranted to modulate international recommendations.
2020 年 2 月下旬,COVID-19 疫情在意大利迅速蔓延。几乎所有的外科服务都进行了重组,目的是维持一个足够的治疗路径,特别是对于外科急症。了解外科医生在现实生活中如何应对疫情,对于起草临床建议是有用的。
邀请来自意大利多个地区的外科医生回答在线调查,以了解他们目前对患有紧急外科疾病的 COVID-19 阳性患者的治疗行为。调查问卷包括关于机构规则和个人治疗方法以及限制疫情传播的问题,共 37 个问题。
共接受了 71 份来自处理急症手术的机构的问卷。从地域上看,参与调查的外科医生分为两组,其中大部分是公立(97.2%)和非学术(91.5%)中心。在 80.3%的医院中治疗 COVID-19 患者;在 69.1%的中心,需要改变工作计划,33.8%的团队中有几乎感染或预防性隔离的外科医生。绝大多数外科医生只对紧急病例进行手术(73.9%),但手术数量明显减少。多达 40%的非创伤性腹部急症病例出现了异常的延迟治疗。在对 COVID-19 患者的手术中,腹腔镜方法的使用比例为 69.6%。在 70.4%和 90.2%的中心,分别有 70.4%和 90.2%的中心在保护医护人员免受 COVID-19 感染和识别无症状感染外科医生方面的策略不符合世界卫生组织的建议。只有 12.7%的中心为手术室工作人员配备了高级个人防护设备。
这项调查证实,COVID-19 疫情正在意大利急诊手术中心发生巨大变化。尽管手术数量减少,但由于诊断延迟,平均而言,紧急情况下的病例更具挑战性。国际科学学会的建议经常不涉及腹腔镜方法的使用、手术室中个人防护设备的可用性,以及对拟接受手术的无症状医生和患者的检测。有必要进一步评估这些态度的短期结果,以调整国际建议。