Serrano Oscar K, Orlando Rocco, Papasavas Pavlos, McClure Mitchell H, Kumar Ajay, Steinberg Adam C, Cohen Jeffrey L, Shichman Steven J, Singh Rekhinder K, Sardella William V, Schipper Bret M
Hartford HealthCare, Hartford, CT.
Department of Surgery, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, CT.
Surg Open Sci. 2021 Apr;4:12-18. doi: 10.1016/j.sopen.2020.09.001. Epub 2020 Oct 22.
The COVID-19 pandemic has compelled a majority of hospital systems to reduce surgical and procedural volumes in an attempt to preserve resources. Elective surgery and procedures resumption has proven to be a calculated risk between COVID-19 exposure and resource depletion and patient morbidity and mortality from surgical deferral.
Within a few days of halting elective surgery and procedures, our 7-hospital (2427 in-patient beds, 26,647 inpatient surgeries) healthcare system developed a multidisciplinary Pivot Plan with the primary outcome of a phased resumption of elective surgery and procedures. The plan entailed the integration of our electronic medical record, order entry automatization, perioperative staff utilization, partnering with primary care providers, and a stepwise COVID-19 testing algorithm based on a predetermined hierarchy of case acuity and timeliness of patient care.
The Pivot Plan was instituted on May 10, 2020. Since then, 22,624 patients have been tested for COVID-19 in anticipation of an elective surgery and procedures; 140 (0.62%) tested positive for COVID-19 and had their procedure deferred. As our testing capability has increased, we have been able to increase our added elective surgery and procedures capacity from 13 cases per day to 531 cases per day. In turn, we have seen the case volume increase by 52%.
Our academic healthcare system located in one of the initial COVID-19 hotspots in the United States has successfully resumed elective surgery and procedures in part due to a receptive and supportive culture based upon nimbleness, agility, and rapid integration of multiple resources from a cohort of diverse disciplines applied to the perioperative services workflow.
新冠疫情迫使大多数医院系统减少手术和操作量,以试图保存资源。事实证明,恢复择期手术和操作是在新冠病毒暴露风险与资源消耗以及手术延期导致的患者发病率和死亡率之间进行的一种权衡。
在停止择期手术和操作后的几天内,我们拥有7家医院(2427张住院病床,26647例住院手术)的医疗系统制定了一项多学科的转向计划,其主要成果是分阶段恢复择期手术和操作。该计划包括整合我们的电子病历、医嘱录入自动化、围手术期工作人员利用、与初级保健提供者合作,以及基于预定的病例严重程度等级和患者护理及时性的逐步新冠病毒检测算法。
转向计划于2020年5月10日实施。从那时起,为了准备择期手术和操作,已有22624名患者接受了新冠病毒检测;其中140人(0.62%)新冠病毒检测呈阳性,其手术被推迟。随着我们检测能力增强,我们已能够将额外的择期手术和操作量从每天13例增加到每天531例。相应地,我们的病例量增加了52%。
我们位于美国最初新冠疫情热点地区之一的学术医疗系统成功恢复了择期手术和操作,部分原因是基于敏捷性、灵活性以及将来自不同学科的多种资源快速整合应用于围手术期服务工作流程的接纳和支持性文化。