| Literature DB >> 32551443 |
Dominika Dabrowska1, Gareth John Lock2.
Abstract
The recent outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 has prompted healthcare professionals to re-design and modify the standards of care and operating procedures relevant to dealing with suspected or confirmed cases of COVID-19. The aim of this review is to highlight the key recommendations related to obstetric anaesthesia from scientific bodies in the United Kingdom and United States and to summarize recently developed and implemented clinical pathways for care of obstetric patients - specifically those requiring urgent general anaesthesia for caesarean section within a large maternity unit in London. The need to perform an emergency operative delivery in a timely manner while ensuring clinicians are suitably equipped and protected represents a uniquely challenging scenario, given the higher risk of viral transmission with aerosol generating procedures. In these settings, emphasis needs to be put on meticulous preparation, safety checklists and specific equipment and staffing adjustments. We present a structured framework comprised of four critical steps aimed to facilitate the development of local strategies and protocols. © Copyright 2020 by Turkish Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Society.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; Caesarean section; general anaesthesia; obstetric anaesthesia; pregnancy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32551443 PMCID: PMC7279880 DOI: 10.5152/TJAR.2020.280420
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim ISSN: 2149-276X
Safety checks recommended during Caesarean Section of COVID-19 positive or suspected patient
| Pre-operative team brief involving core staff members in order to discuss standard obstetric/anaesthetic risks, division into specified teams by role and establish a safe location for neonatal resuscitation outside of the operating theatre. | |
| At the moment of patient transfer into theatre, an update occurs between anaesthetic staff and obstetric staff about feto-maternal status, in order to make a final decision about the mode of anaesthesia required. | |
| Once anaesthesia secured, as standard, WHO checklist must be completed to ensure safer surgery prior to skin incision. | |
| In the immediate post-operative phase, all staff to remain in theatre until WHO checklist sign-out is complete, a thorough obstetric review is undertaken and patient transferred onto the transfer bed. |