| Literature DB >> 33250932 |
Sylvia Garry1, Nada Abdelmagid1, Louisa Baxter2, Natalie Roberts3, Olivier le Polain de Waroux1,4, Sharif Ismail5, Ruwan Ratnayake1, Caroline Favas1, Elizabeth Lewis1, Francesco Checchi1.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to cause high morbidity and mortality in crisis-affected populations. Delivering COVID-19 treatment services in crisis settings will likely entail complex trade-offs between offering services of clinical benefit and minimising risks of nosocomial infection, while allocating resources appropriately and safeguarding other essential services. This paper outlines considerations for humanitarian actors planning COVID-19 treatment services where vaccination is not yet widely available. We suggest key decision-making considerations: allocation of resources to COVID-19 treatment services and the design of clinical services should be based on community preferences, likely opportunity costs, and a clearly articulated package of care across different health system levels. Moreover, appropriate service planning requires information on the expected COVID-19 burden and the resilience of the health system. We explore COVID-19 treatment service options at the patient level (diagnosis, management, location and level of treatment) and measures to reduce nosocomial transmission (cohorting patients, protecting healthcare workers). Lastly, we propose key indicators for monitoring COVID-19 health services.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; COVID-19; COVID-19 treatment service delivery; Coronavirus; Crisis; Fragile; Humanitarian; Low-income; SARS-CoV-2; Treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 33250932 PMCID: PMC7686825 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-020-00325-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Options for health services for confirmed or suspect COVID-19, by level of the health system
| Level of care | COVID-19 treatment services objectives | Interventions |
|---|---|---|
Promote safe and dignified home care Reduce intra-household, community and nosocomial transmission | • Promote home (and, if possible, self-) care of non-severe COVID-19 symptoms through supportive treatment (e.g. antipyretics) [ • Undertake risk communication and behaviour change promotion to limit transmission within households and the wider community (through patient home isolation and household self-quarantine), and to make patients aware of when to seek higher levels of care (e.g. for worsening symptoms); • Identify people with risk factors for severe COVID-19, advising them on care-seeking and promoting earlier supportive treatment if COVID-19 symptoms occur (e.g. antipyretics) [ • Involve community health workers (CHWs) in COVID-19 treatment service delivery, appropriate to their current workload and skillset, as a secondary priority after COVID-19 risk communication and behaviour change promotion [ • Follow up for high-risk patients discharged from inpatient care who could develop/ have developed complications (e.g. poor nutritional status, respiratory difficulties). | |
Promote safe and dignified home care Identify patients in need of hospitalisation | • Encourage home care of non-severe cases, as above; • Identify suspect COVID-19 patients with signs and symptoms of severe illness and refer them onward if higher-level care is available; • Treat co-morbidities and co-infections, e.g. malaria, that may be complicating the clinical picture; • Identify people with risk factors for severe COVID-19 [ • Follow up for high-risk patients discharged from inpatient care who could develop/ have developed complications. | |
Manage some COVID-19 complications Identify patients in need of more advanced care | If oxygen is not available, the risks of inpatient care are likely to outweigh the benefits. However, worthwhile interventions may include: • Identify people with risk factors for severe COVID-19 [ • Consider these patients for onward referral (if appropriate and where available) to facilitate monitoring and maintenance of oxygen levels and management of other complications; • Offer palliative care if no further escalation of care is available or appropriate [ | |
| Supportive care to improve clinical outcomes | As above plus: • Offer basic respiratory support (e.g. oxygen) as per COVID-19 clinical guidance [ • Offer other means of non-invasive ventilation, e.g. continuous positive airway pressure [ • Offer palliative care (as above) if supportive therapy is unsuccessful. | |
| Intensive care to improve clinical outcomes | As above plus: • Manage critical cases through supportive measures including invasive ventilation, cardiovascular support and renal supportive care. |
Fig. 1.Suggested decision-making flowchart to support decision-makers responding to the COVID-19 pandemic in humanitarian health settings
Measures to prevent SARS-CoV-2 nosocomial transmission within healthcare settings
| • Communicate risk and treatment advice to the community, so as to promote early recognition of symptoms by patients and their caregivers, and informed decisions on whether and where to seek care; | |
| • Manage patients at home or at the outpatient level where possible and safe to do so (see Table | |
| • Make every health service contact count: reinforce messaging on behaviour change and hygiene measures for patients and their caregivers; | |
| • Adopt at a minimum distancing between people where possible, universal usage of face coverings (especially where distancing between people is not possible), good ventilation and basic IPC measures (frequent hand hygiene and wearing of medical masks as appropriate) [ | |
| • Triage all patients at all contact points, separating suspected COVID-19 cases from other patients [ | |
| • Adopt patient cohorting and separation measures to minimise mixing of COVID-19 and non COVID-19 patients (see text). | |
| • Ensure all healthcare workers adhere to IPC measures [ | |
| • Ensure all healthcare workers (including community health workers and non-clinical staff) monitor themselves and household contacts and immediately report COVID-19 symptoms. Staff should be supported to stay away from work while they or a member of their household is unwell. Where available and possible, they could be supported to stay elsewhere if a member of the household unwell and they are well (whilst still being required to isolate for the 14 day period); | |
| • Prioritise SARS-CoV-2 testing for health care workers who are have symptoms, so that they can return to work if negative (rather than self-isolate), and to identify those who need to stay away from work if positive. |
Fig. 2.Possible configuration of patient pathways and cohorting within a routine primary- or secondary-level facility during a period of high SARS-CoV-2 transmission and in a setting with high background incidence of other diseases with similar symptoms
Expected variation in positive predictive value (i.e. probability that a case meeting the diagnostic criteria is truly ill with COVID-19) by COVID-19 incidence
| COVID-19 incidence | Background incidence of diseases with overlapping signs and symptoms (consider the patient’s age and comorbidities, the geographic setting and season) | Modality of COVID-19 diagnosis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Testing | Syndromic | ||
| Low | Very high | High | |
| High | Very high | Low to moderate (for mild and moderate cases) Moderate to high (for severe cases) | |
| Low | Very high | Moderate to high (for mild and moderate cases) High (for severe cases) | |
| High | High | Moderate (for mild and moderate cases) Moderate to high (for severe cases) | |
| Low | High | Low to moderate (for mild and moderate cases) Moderate to high (for severe cases) | |
| High | Moderate to high (depends on test specificity) | Very low (for mild and moderate cases) Low (for severe cases) | |
Suggested key performance indicators for COVID-19 hospitalisation services. A weekly frequency of data collection and review is recommended
| Indicator | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Proportion of days with stock-out of an essential tracer medical item (e.g. oxygen, intravenous fluids, key PPE items) | Indicates robustness of supply chain and consequent quality and safety of care. |
| Average bed occupancy | As well as resource utilisation, < 100% occupancy during a period of known intense transmission may suggest barriers to access, including community concerns about the care being offered. |
| Proportion of arriving patients who met criteria for admission but were turned away or whose admission was delayed (by clinical status) | Indicates extent to which services meet demand. |
| Proportion of cases admitted, by age group and co-morbidity status | May indicate whether specific groups of patients (e.g. the most elderly or women) are not presenting for care: compare with what is expected based on data from the rest of the country or the region. |
| Proportion of critical cases among patients admitted | A high proportion of critical cases may indicate a delay in care-seeking. |
| Proportion of patients that become critical after admission | Indicates quality of non-invasive respiratory support and associated care. Compare with data from high-income settings. |
| Case-fatality ratio among non-critical patients | Indicates quality of non-invasive respiratory support and associated care. Compare with data from high-income settings. |
| Case-fatality ratio among critical patients | Indicates quality of invasive respiratory support and associated care. Compare with data from high-income settings. A high case-fatality ratio may also indicate the extent to which ventilation is safe and beneficial. |
| Proportion of healthcare workers utilising appropriate PPE, by role | Indicates availability, effectiveness of training, adherence to procedures and understanding of risk. |
| Proportion of healthcare workers who become ill with test-confirmed or syndromically diagnosed COVID-19 | Indicates safety of care for healthcare workers. Compare with data from high-income settings. A high risk of illness or death in healthcare workers from COVID-19 could be a criterion for closing the facility. |
| Proportion of discharged patients who are happy with the care received | Indicates quality and humanity of care. |