| Literature DB >> 32511791 |
Gerald Holtmann1, Eamonn M Quigley2, Ayesha Shah1, Michael Camilleri3, Victoria Py Tan4, Kok Ann Gwee5, Kentaro Sugano6, Jose D Sollano7, Kwong M Fock8, Uday C Ghoshal9, Minhu Chen10, Axel Dignass11, Henry Cohen12.
Abstract
The available COVID-19 literature has focused on specific disease manifestations, infection control, and delivery or prioritization of services for specific patient groups in the setting of the acute COVID-19 pandemic. Local health systems aim to contain the COVID-19 pandemic and hospitals and health-care providers rush to provide the capacity for a surge of COVID-19 patients. However, the short, medium-term, and long-term outcomes of patients with gastrointestinal (GI) diseases without COVID-19 will be affected by the ability to develop locally adapted strategies to meet their service needs in the COVID-19 setting. To mitigate risks for patients with GI diseases, it is useful to differentiate three phases: (i) the acute phase, (ii) the adaptation phase, and (iii) the consolidation phase. During the acute phase, service delivery for patients with GI disease will be curtailed to meet competing health-care needs of COVID-19 patients. During the adaptation phase, GI services are calibrated towards a "new normal," and the consolidation phase is characterized by rapid introduction and ongoing refinement of services. Proactive planning with engagement of relevant stakeholders including consumer representatives is required to be prepared for a variety of scenarios that are dictated by thus far undefined long-term economic and societal impacts of the pandemic. Because substantial changes to the delivery of services are likely to occur, it is important that these changes are embedded into quality and research frameworks to ensure that data are generated that support evidence-based decision-making during the adaptation and consolidation phases.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Gastrointestinal; Risk-mitigation; Strategy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32511791 PMCID: PMC7300751 DOI: 10.1111/jgh.15133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastroenterol Hepatol ISSN: 0815-9319 Impact factor: 4.369
Figure 1Phases of the response to the COVID‐19 crisis. The initial emergency phase is characterized by reallocation of resources to augment capacity in the field of emergency and intensive care. As a consequence, elective services in other areas including gastroenterology are curtailed. During the adaptation phase, alternative models of care (mainly for consulting services) are developed and implemented. At the same time, national and international guidelines that guide service delivery for the emergency phase will emerge. The Consolidation phase is characterized by review and refinement of the services. Emphasis will be given to prioritization of services. It is critical that the consolidation phase is accompanied by appropriate quality assurance and research activities to generate the evidence that is required to guide decision‐making in relation to service development. [Color figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Potential adaptation of various service components to the COVID‐19 crisis and staged recovery of services during the various phases of the pandemic
| Service‐type | Phases of the COVID‐19 crisis | ||
| Acute phase | Adaptation phase | Consolidation phase | |
| Gastrointestinal endoscopy | Emergency and urgent cases | Emergency and urgent cases, risk‐based provision of overdue elective services. | Normalization of services. Mitigation strategies to address overdue services. |
| Consultations | Discontinuation of all non‐urgent consultation | Use of consultation services via phone, reintroduction of face‐to‐face consultations with distancing precautions, and development of telehealth services | Wider utilization of telehealth services as a standard of care |
| Cancer screening | No change or temporary halt | Services available | Services available |
| Invasive function testing (manometry, pH testing) | Services halted | Risk‐based reintroduction | Gradual return to normal |
| Non‐invasive function testing | Services reduced to low risk, high value services (e.g., | Development and testing of home‐delivered breath tests | Gradual return to normal. Use of home delivered testing when advisable/possible due to local situation |
| Infusion services (e.g. anti‐TNF) | Continues | Continues | Continues |
| Fibroscan/Elastography | Temporary halt | Reduced services | Gradual return of activity |
| Technology/enablers | |||
| Patient reported outcome measures | Continued use of established measures | Development and gradual implementation of PROMs for new service model | Routinely use for novel services models |
| Secure, end‐end‐encrypted virtual clinics with integration of allied health and support staff with seamless patient experience | Available services used whenever possible | Transition of services to available service platforms and start to develop new additional capacity and capabilities | Increasingly routine use of novel technology platforms to deliver services |
| Quality assurance, research | Defining relevant quality indicators or outcome measures and drafting of research protocols or quality frameworks for new modes of service delivery | Trialing of relevant quality indicators or outcome measures | Routine use of quality measures for the refined service models. Defining quality benchmarks |
All responses need to take into consideration the local situation. For all services, the local decision‐making is guided by a risk–benefit analysis that takes into consideration the local situation.
COVID‐19, coronavirus disease‐19; PROMS, Patient‐reported outcome measures.
Figure 2Interrelation of the health system response and the responses of the speciality Gastroenterology with regard to system performance in relation to patient outcomes. The health system response is aimed towards rapid containment of the pandemic (while resources are made available for the treatment of COVID‐19 patients). In the changed environment of the COVID‐19 crisis, specilities such as Gastroenterology are required to adapt and innovate service models and prioritize service allocation to meet patient needs and mitigate risks. If specilities fail (or are unable) to develop mitigation strategies, excess morbidity and mortality will be the consequence. [Color figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 3Sequence of adverse effects on services of patients with gastrointestinal disorders. Besides the initial impact due to reduced capacity for urgent and emergency care, it can be expected that there will be excess morbidity and mortality because of underservicing of chronic conditions and delayed diagnosis of malignancies. Subsequently, it also can be expected that the economic consequences of the COVID‐19 crisis will have long lasting adverse economic effects that have the potential to impact on service delivery for patients with gastrointestinal disorders. [Color figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]