Literature DB >> 33241253

Managing a Renal Transplant Programme During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Practical Experience from a Singapore Transplant Centre.

Terence Kee1, Valerie HL Gan, Jasmine Shimin Chung, Ping Sing Tee, York Moi Lu, Lai Peng Chan, Elizabeth HT Cheong, Puay Hoon Lee, Jin Hua Yong, Quan Yao Ho, Sobhana Thangaraju, Fiona Foo, Natelie Kwan, Eleanor Ng, He Xia, Constance Lee, Shannon Boey, Marjorie Foo, Chieh Suai Tan.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) has significantly affected the way healthcare is delivered in Singapore. Healthcare services such as renal transplantation had to rapidly adjust and meet the needs to (1) protect patients and staff, (2) ramp up, conserve or redeploy resources while (3) ensuring that critical services remained operational. This paper aims to describe the experience of the renal transplant programme at the Singapore General Hospital (SGH) in responding to the risks and constraints posed by the pandemic. METHODS AND MATERIALS: This is a review and summary of the SGH renal transplant programme's policy and protocols that were either modified or developed in response to the COVID-19 Pandemic.
RESULTS: A multi-pronged approach was adopted to respond to the challenges of COVID-19. These included ensuring business continuity by splitting the transplant team into different locations, adopting video and tele-consults to minimise potential patient exposure to COVID-19, streamlining work processes using electronic forms, ensuring safe paths for patients who needed to come to hospital, ring-fencing and testing new inpatients at risk for COVID-19, enhancing precautionary measures for transplant surgery, ensuring a stable supply chain of immunosuppression, and sustaining patient and staff education programmes via video conferencing.
CONCLUSIONS: Though the COVID-19 pandemic has reduced access to kidney transplantation, opportunities arose to adopt telemedicine into mainstream transplant practice as well as use electronic platforms to streamline work processes. Screening protocols were established to ensure that transplantation could be performed safely, while webinars reached out to empower patients to take precautions against COVID-19.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 33241253

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Acad Med Singap        ISSN: 0304-4602            Impact factor:   2.473


  3 in total

Review 1.  One Year on: An Overview of Singapore's Response to COVID-19-What We Did, How We Fared, How We Can Move Forward.

Authors:  S Vivek Anand; Yao Kang Shuy; Poay Sian Sabrina Lee; Eng Sing Lee
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-08-30       Impact factor: 4.614

2.  Psychological distress and associated factors among kidney transplant recipients and living kidney donors during COVID-19.

Authors:  Sobhana Thangaraju; Yeli Wang; Terence Kee; Ping Sing Tee; York Moi Lu; Jing Hua Yong; Quan Yao Ho; Ian Tatt Liew; Fiona Foo; Natelie Kwan; Eleanor Ng; Xia He; Constance Lee; Shannon Baey; Jenny Leong; Judy Tan; Rupesh Madhukar Shirore; Tazeen Hasan Jafar
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2022-02-24       Impact factor: 2.388

Review 3.  Insights and pearls of healthcare systems management of COVID-19 in Asia and its relevance to Asian transplant services.

Authors:  Terence Kee
Journal:  Korean J Transplant       Date:  2021-09-30
  3 in total

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