Babidge Wendy J, Tivey David R, Kovoor Joshua G, Weidenbach Kristin, Collinson Trevor G, Hewett Peter J, Hugh Thomas J, Padbury Robert T A, Hill Nicola M, Maddern Guy J
Research Audit and Academic Surgery, Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Discipline of Surgery, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
ANZ J Surg. 2020 Sep;90(9):1558-1565. doi: 10.1111/ans.16196. Epub 2020 Aug 17.
The novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, caused the COVID-19 global pandemic. In response, the Australian and New Zealand governments activated their respective emergency plans and hospital frameworks to deal with the potential increased demand on scarce resources. Surgical triage formed an important part of this response to protect the healthcare system's capacity to respond to COVID-19.
A rapid review methodology was adapted to search for all levels of evidence on triaging surgery during the current COVID-19 outbreak. Searches were limited to PubMed (inception to 10 April 2020) and supplemented with grey literature searches using the Google search engine. Further, relevant articles were also sourced through the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons COVID-19 Working Group. Recent government advice (May 2020) is also included.
This rapid review is a summary of advice from Australian, New Zealand and international speciality groups regarding triaging of surgical cases, as well as the peer-reviewed literature. The key theme across all jurisdictions was to not compromise clinical judgement and to enable individualized, ethical and patient-centred care. The topics reported on include implications of COVID-19 on surgical triage, competing demands on healthcare resources (surgery versus COVID-19 cases), and the low incidence of COVID-19 resulting in a possibility to increase surgical caseloads over time.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, urgent and emergency surgery must continue. A carefully staged return of elective surgery should align with a decrease in COVID-19 caseload. Combining evidence and expert opinion, schemas and recommendations have been proposed to guide this process in Australia and New Zealand.
新型冠状病毒SARS-CoV-2引发了COVID-19全球大流行。作为应对措施,澳大利亚和新西兰政府启动了各自的应急计划和医院框架,以应对稀缺资源潜在的需求增长。手术分诊是这一应对措施的重要组成部分,旨在保护医疗系统应对COVID-19的能力。
采用快速综述方法,检索当前COVID-19疫情期间手术分诊各层面的证据。检索限于PubMed(起始至2020年4月10日),并通过谷歌搜索引擎补充灰色文献检索。此外,还通过澳大利亚皇家外科学院COVID-19工作组获取相关文章。近期政府建议(2020年5月)也被纳入。
本快速综述总结了澳大利亚、新西兰和国际专业团体关于手术病例分诊的建议以及同行评审文献。所有司法管辖区的关键主题是不影响临床判断,并实现个性化、符合伦理和以患者为中心的护理。所报告的主题包括COVID-19对手术分诊的影响、医疗资源的竞争需求(手术与COVID-19病例),以及COVID-19的低发病率使得随着时间推移增加手术量成为可能。
在COVID-19大流行期间,紧急和急诊手术必须继续。择期手术谨慎分阶段恢复应与COVID-19病例数的减少相一致。结合证据和专家意见,已提出方案和建议以指导澳大利亚和新西兰的这一过程。