| Literature DB >> 32304401 |
Patrick A Massey1, Kaylan McClary, Andrew S Zhang, Felix H Savoie, R Shane Barton.
Abstract
The novel coronavirus pandemic, also known as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has placed an immense strain on healthcare systems across the entire world. Consequently, multiple federal and state governments have placed restrictions on hospitals such as limiting "elective surgery" and recommending social or physical distancing. We review the literature on several areas that have been affected including surgical selection, inpatient care, and physician well-being. These areas affecting inpatient paradigms include surgical priority, physical or social distancing, file sharing for online clinical communications, and physician wellness. During this crisis, it is important that orthopaedic departments place an emphasis on personnel safety and slowing the spread of the virus so that the department can still maintain vital functions. Physical distancing and emerging technologies such as inpatient telemedicine and online file sharing applications can enable orthopaedic programs to still function while attempting to protect medical staff and patients from the novel coronavirus spread. This literature review sought to provide evidence-based guidance to orthopaedic departments during an unprecedented time. Orthopaedic surgeons should follow the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines, wear personal protective equipment (PPE) when appropriate, have teams created using physical distancing, understand the department's policy on elective surgery, and engage in routines which enhance physician wellness.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32304401 PMCID: PMC7195848 DOI: 10.5435/JAAOS-D-20-00360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Acad Orthop Surg ISSN: 1067-151X Impact factor: 3.020
Stratified Urgency of Different Orthopaedic Diagnoses and Surgical Procedures for Inpatient and Outpatient Surgeries
| Subspecialty | Priority A | Priority B | Priority C | Priority D | Priority E |
| Emergency (Within 24 hr) | Urgent (Within 48 hr) | Expedited (Within 2 wk) | Within 3 mo | More Than 3 mo | |
| Trauma | Open fractures | Femur neck fracture in the elderly | Surgical clavicle fractures | ||
| Femur neck fracture in the young | Intertrochanteric femur fracture | Surgical scapula fractures | |||
| Pelvic fractures with bleeding[ | Talar neck fractures | Surgical humerus fractures | |||
| Fractures with vascular injury[ | Surgical femur shaft fractures | Surgical radius and ulna fractures | |||
| Compartment syndrome[ | Surgical distal femur fracture | Surgical tibia plateau fractures | |||
| Reduction of joint dislocation[ | Surgical tibia shaft fractures | Surgical ankle fractures | |||
| Necrotizing fasciitis[ | Pelvis and acetabulum fractures | ||||
| Closed fractures with impending soft-tissue compromise | Closure or flap coverage of open fractures | ||||
| External fixation for complex fractures | Repairable osteochondral fractures | ||||
| Spine | Closed reduction of cervical facet dislocation[ | Cauda equina syndrome | Surgical lumbar disk hernia with radiculopathy | Spondylolisthesis | |
| SCI | Surgical cervical radiculopathy | ||||
| Epidural abscess | Cervical myelopathy | ||||
| Epidural hematoma | |||||
| Orthopaedic oncology | Surgical spine tumor with cord compression | Impending pathologic fractures | |||
| Foot and ankle | Surgical foot fractures | Ankle arthroplasty or fusion | |||
| Miscellaneous | Septic arthritis[ | ||||
| Shoulder and elbow | Shoulder arthroplasty | ||||
| Elbow arthroplasty | |||||
| Adult reconstruction | Acute arthroplasty infection | Periprosthetic fracture | Subacute arthroplasty infection | Knee arthroplasty | |
| Reduction of prosthetic joint dislocation | Hip arthroplasty | ||||
| Pediatric orthopaedics | Hip fractures and dislocations[ | Pediatric fractures | Spine deformity correction | ||
| Supracondylar humerus fractures | Ligament avulsion repairs | ||||
| Slipped capital femur epiphysis | |||||
| Tibia fractures with vascular compromise[ | |||||
| Open fractures | |||||
| Hand | Acute carpal tunnel syndrome | ||||
| Pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis | |||||
| Digit replantation | |||||
| Reduction of joint dislocation | |||||
| Sport medicine | External fixation of knee dislocations | ||||
SCI = spinal cord injury
Surgery should be done immediately.
Surgery should be done within 6 hours.
Classification system is based on the priority level of each diagnosis or surgery. Surgeries that are routinely performed outpatient are formatted as bold.
Figure 1Chart showing resource-based strategy of orthopaedic surgery priorities. Based on which resources are needed, surgeons may prioritize different surgeries. Surgeons may move between phases on a continuum. During all phases, outpatient surgery may be moved to a separate surgery center to mitigate risk and conserve resources at the inpatient hospital. Surgeries that may be postponed in different phases are shaded gray.
Figure 2Photograph showing the cubicles setup for physician workstations. Each workstation is assigned to a single physician with a clear sign so that no others will use their works station.
Potential Three-Team Schedule for 15 Medical Personnel (Five per Year)
| Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11 | Week 12 | |
| Inpatient team | ||||||||||||
| Trauma chief | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C |
| Trauma Sr | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C |
| Trauma Jr | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C |
| Day consults | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C |
| Nights | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C |
| Outpatient team | ||||||||||||
| Outpatient clinic resident 1 | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B |
| Outpatient clinic resident 2 | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B |
| Outpatient clinic resident 3 | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B |
| ASC surgical resident | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B |
| Telemedicine clinic | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B |
| Off-site team | ||||||||||||
| VA | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A | PGY 2B | PGY 2C | PGY 2A |
| Pediatric hospital | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A | PGY 4B | PGY 4C | PGY 4A |
| Off-site hospital 1 | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A | PGY 3B | PGY 3C | PGY 3A |
| Off-site clinic resident | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A | PGY 1B | PGY 1C | PGY 1A |
| Admin/research resident | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A | PGY 5B | PGY 5C | PGY 5A |
ASC = ambulatory surgery center
This can be applied to residents, attendings, and/or physician extenders. Each team works 1 week on the inpatient team and then has 2 weeks with no or limited contact in the inpatient setting.
Figure 3A, Photograph showing the Bayou box: an intravenous (IV) fluid management system, with ECG, pulseoximeter, and blood pressure monitor which can be accessed outside of a novel coronavirus patient's room. The IV fluids can be secured by closing the cabinet doors and placing a lock. B, IV tubing and monitor cables pass through a portal in the exterior wall. C, Monitoring cables and IV fluid tubing enters the patient's room through another portal. Video can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gf_u_CrSCd4.
Online Document Sharing Applications for Clinical Communication With Features Listed Such as Cost, HIPAA Compliance, Compatibility, and Signature Capabilities
| Name | Document | Signature Capabilities | Security[ | Compatibility | File Size | Storage | Cost (At Time of Publication) | Free Version | Reference Site |
| Dropbox | Images (.gif, .jpg, .png).doc, .docx, .docm, .dotx, .dotm, .xls, .xlsx, .xlsm, .xltx, .xltm, .ppt, .pptx, .pps, .ppsx, .pptm, .potx, .potm, .pdf, .htm or .html, .txt, .rtf.ico, .zip, .wav, .mp3, .mpg, .mpeg, .avi, .qt, .mov, .MP4, .M4v, .js, .css | Via other applications (ie, DocuSign, HelloSign etc) | HIPAA eligible | Mac OS 10.10-10.15, iOS 11+, Android 4.4+, Windows 10, Ubuntu 14.04+ | Website limit 10 GB, mobile or desktop app no limit | Standard 5 TB, advanced + unlimited | Dropbox business: standard 12.50/user/mo, advanced $20/user/mo | Trial version | |
| Box | Most file types | Via other applications (ie, Docusign, HelloSign etc) | HIPAA eligible | Windows 10, most recent 2 macOS, Android (all versions in recent 3 yr), iOS most recent 2 versions | 2 GB starter, 5 GB business ad up | 100 GB starter, otherwise unlimited | Varies by file type. Word Doc up to 50 MB, presentations 100 MB, spreadsheets 5million cells+I8:K | Trial version | |
| Google Drive/G Suite | Any type | Via other applications (ie, DocuSign, HelloSign etc) | HIPAA eligible | Windows 7+, MacOS 10.11+, Android 4.4+, iOS 11+. | Varies by file type. Word Doc up to 50 MB, presentations 100 MB, spreadsheets 5 million cells | 30 GB up to unlimited with business/enterprise versions | Basic $6/user/mo, business $12/user/mo, enterprise $25/user/mo | Personal 15 GB storage. Free trial upgraded versions | |
| Microsoft OneDrive | Large variety of file types | Via other applications (ie, DocuSign, HelloSign etc) | Plan 2 or business include security/compliance measures. HIPAA eligible. | Windows 7+, MacOS 10.12+, IOS 11.3+, Android 6.0+ | 10 GB | 1 TB/user if under 5 users, otherwise unlimited | Plan 1 $5/user/mo. plan 2 $10/user/mo, business premium &$12.50/user/mo | 1 mo trial for premium version | |
| Hightail | Any type | Yes, may sign PDF, work, Excel, PPT and Rich text files | HIPAA eligible with business level | Windows 7+, MacOS 10.11+, IOS 10.9+, Android 4.4+, Integrated with other cloud services | LITE: 100 MB, Pro: 25 GB, teams: 50 GB, business: 500 GB | Lite 2 GB, otherwise unlimited | Pro $12/user/mo | Lite | |
| Amazon WorkDocs | Any type | Via other applications (ie, DocuSign, HelloSign etc) | HIPAA eligible | Microsoft Windows PCs, Amazon WorkSpaces, and macOS version 10.11 and later Mobile: iOS, Android, and Fire Tablet | 5 GB | 1 TB per user baseline | Per user, $5/mo with 1 TB each | Eligible | |
| Hello sign | doc, docx, pdf, ppsx, ppt, pptx, jpg, jpeg, png, xls, xlsx, txt, html, and gif | Yes, reported legally binding per US and European e-signature laws | HIPAA eligible | Web and mobile App. Windows, iOS, Android. Cloud integrated, based out of Drop Box | 40 MB or 500 pages | NA | Unlimited signatures: Pro $13/mo per user, business: $40/mo per 5 users | Yes, indivual can request 3 signatures month for documents | |
| DocuHub | Built for PDF, but reported capable of other file types including: DOC, DOCX, .XLS, .XLSX, .PPT, .RTF, .TXT, .PNG, .JPG, .JPEG, .GIF | Yes. Reported compliant with legally binding agreements. | No clear documentation of HIPAA compliance. | Web and mobile based. Windows, iOS and android. Cloud integrated, based out of Amazon Web services | <30 MB and <1,000 pages | NA | Fee per user based. 4.99 per month × 12 mo or 6.99 monthly basis | Yes | |
| Adobe sign | Built for PDF, but reported capable of other file types including: DOC, DOCX, RTF, XLS, XLSX, PPT, PPTX, TXT, CSV, HTML, HTM, TIFF, TIF, BMP, GIF, JPG, JPEG, and PNG | Yes, reported meets legal binding standards | Able to be configured for HIPAA compliance[ | DesktopMac nd Windows. Mobile. Cloud based | 4 MB | NA | Adobe Acrobat Pro with E-Sign. Personal: 14.99/mo/user. Small business (max 9 users) 29.99/mo/user. Larger business: Call for pricing | Trial version | |
| Doc Sign | .doc, .docm, .docx, .dot, .dotm, .dotx, .htm, .html, .msg, .pdf, .rtf, .txt, .wpd, .xps.bmp, .gif, .jpg, .jpeg, .png, .tif, .tiff, .pot, .potx, .pps, .ppt, .pptm, .pptx, .csv, .xls, .xlsm, .xlsx | Reports e-signature legal agreement compliance | Optional HIPAA compliance | DesktopMac nd Windows. Mobile. Cloud based | 25 MB | NA | Personal: 10/mo limited to 5 requested signatures. Unlimited options: Standard: $25/user/mo up to 3 users. Business $40/mo/user upt to 3 users. Contact for more users. | Trial version |
Most of the above websites report eligibility for HIPAA compliance with a business associate agreement (BAA). We recommend anyone considering adopting the use of an online filesharing and or signature program, discuss it with his or her information security/compliance office first.