Department of Neurological Surgery, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2021 Feb;146:20-25. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2020.10.095. Epub 2020 Oct 23.
The COVID-19 outbreak has led to fundamental disruptions of health care and its delivery with sweeping implications for patients and physicians of all specialties, including neurosurgery. In an effort to conserve hospital resources, neurosurgical procedures were classified into tiers to determine which procedures have to be performed in a timely fashion and which ones can be temporarily suspended to aid in the hospital's reallocation of resources when equipment is scarce. These guidelines were created quickly based on little existing evidence, and thus were initially variable and required refinement. As the early wave can now be assessed in retrospect, the authors describe the lessons learned and the protocols established based on published global evidence to continue to practice neurosurgery sensibly and minimize disruptions. These operational protocols can be applied in a surge of COVID-19 or another airborne pandemic.
COVID-19 疫情的爆发导致医疗服务出现了根本性的中断,对所有专业的患者和医生都产生了广泛的影响,包括神经外科。为了节省医院资源,神经外科手术被分为不同级别,以确定哪些手术必须及时进行,哪些可以暂时暂停,以便在设备短缺时帮助医院重新分配资源。这些指南是根据现有证据很少的情况下迅速制定的,因此最初存在差异,需要进一步完善。由于现在可以对早期阶段进行回顾,作者根据已发表的全球证据描述了所获得的经验教训以及制定的方案,以便继续合理地进行神经外科手术,并将中断降到最低。这些操作方案可应用于 COVID-19 或另一种空气传播的大流行浪潮中。