Diekmann Paul R, O'Neill Owen R, Floyd Edward R, Meinke Laura C, Lehman-Lane Justina, Uzlik Rachel M, Stone McGaver Rebecca
Orthopedic Surgery, Twin Cities Orthopedics, Golden Valley, USA.
Orthopedic Surgery, Revo Health, Golden Valley, USA.
Cureus. 2022 Apr 18;14(4):e24247. doi: 10.7759/cureus.24247. eCollection 2022 Apr.
Background and objective The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has presented tremendous challenges to the healthcare systems worldwide. Consequently, ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) have been forced to find new and innovative ways to function safely and maintain operations. We conducted a study at a large United States (US) private orthopedic surgery practice, where a universal screening policy and testing protocol for COVID-19 was implemented for patients and ASC personnel including surgeons, in order to examine the incidence of COVID-19 in patients scheduled for orthopedic surgery in ASC settings as well as the incidence among the surgeons and ASC personnel. Methods The universal screening protocol was implemented in the ASCs of the facility during the early stage of the pandemic for an eight-month period from April 28, 2020, to December 31, 2020. All ASC personnel including surgeons had their symptoms tracked daily and were rapid-tested every two weeks. All patients were screened and tested before they entered the ASC. Results A total of 70 out of 12,115 patients and 41 out of 642 ASC personnel tested positive for COVID-19, resulting in infection rates of 0.6% and 6.4%, respectively. Individual symptoms, age, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) scores, and comorbidities were documented, and no single factor was found to be common among positive (+) tests. Conclusions The implementation of universal screening and symptom-reporting procedures was associated with a very low rate of infections among ASC patients, staff, and surgeons, and it offers a reproducible framework for other facilities to continue to provide orthopedic outpatient operations in ASC settings during the ongoing iterations of the COVID-19 pandemic.
背景与目的 2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行给全球医疗系统带来了巨大挑战。因此,门诊手术中心(ASC)被迫寻找新的创新方法来安全运作并维持运营。我们在美国一家大型私立骨科手术诊所进行了一项研究,该诊所对患者以及包括外科医生在内的ASC工作人员实施了针对COVID-19的通用筛查政策和检测方案,以检查在ASC环境中计划进行骨科手术的患者中COVID-19的发病率以及外科医生和ASC工作人员中的发病率。方法 在大流行早期,从2020年4月28日至2020年12月31日的八个月期间,在该机构的ASC中实施了通用筛查方案。所有ASC工作人员包括外科医生每天都要追踪症状,每两周进行快速检测。所有患者在进入ASC之前都要进行筛查和检测。结果 在12115名患者中,共有70人COVID-19检测呈阳性,在642名ASC工作人员中,有41人检测呈阳性,感染率分别为0.6%和6.4%。记录了个体症状、年龄、美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)评分和合并症,在阳性检测中未发现单一共同因素。结论 实施通用筛查和症状报告程序与ASC患者、工作人员和外科医生中非常低的感染率相关,并且为其他机构在COVID-19大流行的持续阶段继续在ASC环境中提供骨科门诊手术提供了一个可重复的框架。