Literature DB >> 32333858

Screening and triage at health-care facilities in Timor-Leste during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Rosemary Howitt1, Gustodio Alves de Jesus2, Flavio Araujo2, Joshua Francis3, Ian Marr3, Melanie McVean4, Eleanor MacMorran5, Victoria Rollinson5, Antonieta Chung4, Teem Wing Yip5.   

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32333858      PMCID: PMC7176383          DOI: 10.1016/S2213-2600(20)30183-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet Respir Med        ISSN: 2213-2600            Impact factor:   30.700


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We read with great interest the correspondence from Rodgers Ayebare and colleagues, and commend the authors for their contribution to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) response in settings with limited diagnostics and resources. This approach is particularly relevant in Timor-Leste, a small and young island nation with a fragile health-care system that is a challenging context in which to provide care during the current pandemic. Until March 21, 2020, no confirmed cases of COVID-19 had been reported in Timor-Leste, but we now face the challenge of effectively containing the spread of the virus and minimising the impact of local transmission. At present, all suspected cases are referred to the COVID-19 Isolation Centre in Dili, where patients are tested and isolated pending test results; contacts are traced and isolated. The Ministry of Health releases a daily update on the number of people tested and cumulative numbers of positive and negative cases. Anybody entering Timor-Leste is quarantined for 14 days in facilities advised by the government. A working group of doctors, nurses, and midwives—from the Ministry of Health and non-governmental organisations—with experience in local systems of both hospital and primary health care, has designed a screening and triage framework, developing key aspects of the proposed algorithm from Ayebare and colleagues. We would like to share this as a reference for others in similar low-to-middle-income settings who are endeavouring to write their own guidelines (figure ).
Figure

Triage for acute respiratory disease during the COVID-19 pandemic

COVID-19=coronavirus disease 2019. *Available on request from the corresponding author.

Triage for acute respiratory disease during the COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19=coronavirus disease 2019. *Available on request from the corresponding author. The key aims of this guideline are to minimise nosocomial transmission of COVID-19 and, in particular, to protect health-care workers in an environment in which limited resources have a substantial effect on the availability of personal protective equipment, laboratory testing, and trained clinicians. We also hope that by prioritising urgent care, we can enable health-care systems to function in the face of the growing pandemic and prevent them from becoming overwhelmed by COVID-19-related illness. The screening and triage algorithm will be used in conjunction with a rapid questionnaire to optimise the integration of a new system into an established clinical triage protocol in Timor-Leste, to avoid the creation of new pathways. This approach will also facilitate effective documentation and communication between health-care facilities, and support surveillance efforts. We are cascading this core framework through all national health-care facilities using small teams of doctors and nurses to educate, communicate, and adapt the framework in consultation with local health-care workers. By April 24, 2020, we should have reached every government hospital and community health centre in the country (>80 health-care facilities).
  1 in total

1.  Adoption of COVID-19 triage strategies for low-income settings.

Authors:  Rodgers R Ayebare; Robert Flick; Solome Okware; Bongomin Bodo; Mohammed Lamorde
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2020-03-11       Impact factor: 30.700

  1 in total
  2 in total

1.  Considerations for planning COVID-19 treatment services in humanitarian responses.

Authors:  Sylvia Garry; Nada Abdelmagid; Louisa Baxter; Natalie Roberts; Olivier le Polain de Waroux; Sharif Ismail; Ruwan Ratnayake; Caroline Favas; Elizabeth Lewis; Francesco Checchi
Journal:  Confl Health       Date:  2020-11-25       Impact factor: 2.723

2.  Mainstreaming the private health sector in the response to COVID-19: facility readinessassessment for screening services in Edo State, Nigeria.

Authors:  Darlington Ewaen Obaseki; Obehi Akoria; Esohe Olivia Ogboghodo; Otaniyenuwa Eloghosa Obarisiagbon; Ndubuisi Mokogwu; Orezimena Temitope Omo-Ikirodah; Funmilola Adio; Gregrey Agbonvihele Oko-Oboh; Sylvanus Okogbenin; Ekaete Tobin; Patrick Okundia; Osamwonyi Irowa; Uzor Okonmah
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2020-06-26
  2 in total

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