| Literature DB >> 32450877 |
Per P Bredmose1,2,3, Monica Diczbalis4, Emma Butterfield4, Karel Habig5, Andrew Pearce6, Svein Are Osbakk7, Ville Voipio8, Marcus Rudolph9, Alistair Maddock10, John O'Neill4,11.
Abstract
The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV2 emerged in December 2019 and is now pandemic. Initial analysis suggests that 5% of infected patients will require critical care, and that respiratory failure requiring intubation is associated with high mortality.Sick patients are geographically dispersed: most patients will remain in situ until they are in need of critical care. Additionally, there are likely to be patients who require retrieval for other reasons but who are co-incidentally infected with SARS-CoV-2 or shedding virus.The COVID-19 pandemic therefore poses a challenge to critical care retrieval systems, which often depend on small teams of specialists who live and work together closely. The infection or quarantining of a small absolute number of these staff could catastrophically compromise service delivery.Avoiding occupational exposure to COVID-19, and thereby ensuring service continuity, is the primary objective of aeromedical retrieval services during the pandemic. In this discussion paper we collaborated with helicopter emergency medical services(HEMS) worldwide to identify risks in retrieving COVID-19 patients, and develop strategies to mitigate these.Simulation involving the whole aeromedical retrieval team ensures that safety concerns can be addressed during the development of a standard operating procedure. Some services tested personal protective equipment and protocols in the aeromedical environment with simulation. We also incorporated experiences, standard operating procedures and approaches across several HEMS services internationally.As a result of this collaboration, we outline an approach to the safe aeromedical retrieval of a COVID-19 patient, and describe how this framework can be used to develop a local standard operating procedure.Entities:
Keywords: Aeromedical transport; COVID-19; HEMS; Helicopter emergency medical service; Infectious disease; Retrieval; Transport
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32450877 PMCID: PMC7247287 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-020-00736-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Decision support framework
| Theme | Topic | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Selection of patients for transport | Regional risk assessment | Vehicle availability. Availability of alternative platforms. |
| Risk of occupational infection on different platforms. | ||
| HEMS continuity and the impact of suspending HEMS/aeromedical services and redeploying staff. | ||
| Planned management of patients without COVID-19 symptoms | ||
| Infection control strategies | PPE | PPE supplies |
| PPE training (including aircrew) | ||
| PPE compatibility with aviation safety and communications equipment | ||
| PPE compatibility with working environment (eg heat stress, visibility) | ||
| Minimise exposure: people | Protecting the flight crew from patient contact (screens, no patient handling) | |
| Reducing flight crew numbers | ||
| Aligning medical/aviation shift patterns to avoid exposure of multiple crews | ||
| Minimise exposure: equipment | Removal of extra medical/rescue equipment | |
| Removal of some aviation safety gear | ||
| Packaging equipment in wipe-down packaging | ||
| Choosing a route through the hospital to minimise cross-contamination | ||
| At the hospital | Accessing the patient | Time and place for handover and donning PPE |
| Need for extra staff on ground (e.g. a runner in clean PPE to open doors/operate lifts) | ||
| Intubation | Logistics of performing intubation in PPE | |
| Policy for use of PPE during the intubation of non-COVID-19 patients during pandemic COVID-19 | ||
| Packaging | How to package the patient to reduce their infectivity | |
| At mission completion | Waste disposal | Management of increased clinical waste |
| Sorting of waste to minimise clinical waste | ||
| Decontamination | Suitable aircraft cleaning products, and their availability | |
| Where and by whom the aircraft will be cleaned | ||
| Follow-up | Management of PPE breaches | |
| Management of exposed or symptomatic staff | ||
| In the community | Base living | Modifications to cleaning schedule |
| Minimising staff on base | ||
| Maintaining morale | ||
| Social distancing off-duty |