| Literature DB >> 32052373 |
Randy S Wax1,2,3, Michael D Christian4.
Abstract
A global health emergency has been declared by the World Health Organization as the 2019-nCoV outbreak spreads across the world, with confirmed patients in Canada. Patients infected with 2019-nCoV are at risk for developing respiratory failure and requiring admission to critical care units. While providing optimal treatment for these patients, careful execution of infection control measures is necessary to prevent nosocomial transmission to other patients and to healthcare workers providing care. Although the exact mechanisms of transmission are currently unclear, human-to-human transmission can occur, and the risk of airborne spread during aerosol-generating medical procedures remains a concern in specific circumstances. This paper summarizes important considerations regarding patient screening, environmental controls, personal protective equipment, resuscitation measures (including intubation), and critical care unit operations planning as we prepare for the possibility of new imported cases or local outbreaks of 2019-nCoV. Although understanding of the 2019-nCoV virus is evolving, lessons learned from prior infectious disease challenges such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome will hopefully improve our state of readiness regardless of the number of cases we eventually manage in Canada.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32052373 PMCID: PMC7091420 DOI: 10.1007/s12630-020-01591-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Anaesth ISSN: 0832-610X Impact factor: 6.713
Fig. 1Example of enhanced droplet/airborne personal protective equipment for intubation of patient with suspected or confirmed novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) incorporating fit-tested N95 mask. Healthcare staff preparing to enter a room to intubate a patient with suspected or confirmed 2019-nCoV. Note use of fluid-resistant gown, covering of head and neck plus face shield to minimize skin exposure to droplet contamination. Additional eye protection worn under the face shield may help to avoid conjunctival exposure from spray around the shield. Fit-tested N95 mask is worn to protect against inhalation of airborne virus. Strips of tape securing gloves to the gown help prevent gloves from slipping during patient care and exposing wrists to contamination
Fig. 2Example of enhanced droplet/airborne personal protective equipment incorporating use of powered air purifying respirator (PAPR) for intubation of a simulated patient with 2019-nCoV. Healthcare staff wearing PAPR blower unit with incorporated filter on belt (rear view on left), attached to full hood with hose. Gown and gloves used to avoid droplet or contact contamination. Note that in this case, a fit-tested N95 respirator is being worn under the PAPR hood to protect against inhalation of airborne viral particles during removal of personal protective equipment (PPE), helpful in settings without appropriate individual airborne isolation rooms with anterooms
Considerations in deciding to use powered air purifying respirators vs N95 mask as part of personal protective equipment for novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) patients
| Potential advantages of PAPR | Potential disadvantages of PAPR |
|---|---|
| Higher protection factor | May be more complicated than required for mode of transmission, leading to greater risk of contamination when removing PAPR |
| Full facial and head coverage | Higher cost compared with N95 respirators |
| More comfortable for prolonged resuscitations or transports and resistance to being accidentally dislodged | Inability to reuse disposable filters between patients, need large supply of filters |
| Eliminates N95 fit testing concerns (especially for those who cannot be successfully fit tested because of facial features) | Need explicit procedures for decontamination and recycling of blower units for next use |
| No need to maintain supply of variety of N95 respirators to meet fit testing requirements | Potential compromise of disposable components (e.g., hoods, hoses) through inappropriate attempts to sterilize and reuse if supplies run low, leading to infection risk |
| Can be used with facial hair or for staff who cannot be successfully fit tested | Communication challenges between staff due to fan noise |
| Need for recurrent training of staff to maintain competence if not frequently used |
PAPR = powered air purifying respirators
Risk consideration for resuscitation procedures during novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) Protected Code Blue
| Lower risk resuscitation interventions | Higher risk resuscitation interventions more likely to generate aerosol and/or increase risk of viral transmission to staff |
|---|---|
| Placement of an oral airway | High-flow nasal cannula |
| Placement of an oxygen mask with exhalation filter on patient (if available) | Bag-mask ventilation |
| Chest compressions | CPAP/BiPAP |
| Defibrillation, cardioversion, transcutaneous pacing | Endotracheal intubation/surgical airway |
| Obtaining intravenous or intraosseous access | Bronchoscopy |
| Administration of intravenous resuscitation drugs | Gastrointestinal endoscopy |
CPAP/BiPAP = continuous positive airway pressure/bilevel positive airway pressure