| Literature DB >> 33350187 |
Yuseon Yang1, Hyejung Kim2, Jieun Hwang3.
Abstract
With the rapid spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a particularly sharp increase in the number of confirmed cases in Daegu and Gyeongbuk regions at the end of February, Korea faced an unprecedented shortage of medical resources, including hospital beds. To cope with this shortage, the government introduced a severity scoring system for patients with COVID-19 and designed a new type of quarantine facility for treating and isolating patients with mild symptoms out of the hospital, namely, the Residential Treatment Center (RTC). A patient with mild symptoms was immediately isolated in the RTC and continuously monitored to detect changes in symptoms. If the symptoms aggravate, the patient was transferred to a hospital. RTCs were designed by creating a quarantine environment in existing lodging facilities capable of accommodating > 100 individuals. The facilities were entirely divided into a clean zone (working area) and contaminated zone (patient zone), separating the space, air, and movement routes, and the staff wore level D personal protective equipment (PPE) in the contaminated zone. The staffs consisted of medical personnel, police officers, soldiers, and operation personnel, and worked in two or three shifts per day. Their duty was mainly to monitor the health conditions of quarantined patients, provide accommodations, and regularly collect specimens to determine if they can be released. For the past two months, RTCs secured approximately 4,000 isolation rooms and treated approximately 3,000 patients with mild symptoms and operated stably without additional spread of the disease in and out of the centers. Based on these experience, we would like to suggest the utilization of RTCs as strategic quarantine facilities in pandemic situations.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus; Isolation; Korea; Residential Treatment Center
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33350187 PMCID: PMC7752259 DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2020.35.e429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Med Sci ISSN: 1011-8934 Impact factor: 2.153
Designation and operation status of residential treatment centers
| No. | Name | Operation period | No. of Isolation rooms | Original usage of the facility | Region | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch, date | Close, date | Term, day | |||||
| 1 | Daegu 1 | Mar 02, 2020 | Apr 29, 2020 | 58 | 160 | Dormitory | Daegu |
| 2 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 1 | Mar 04, 2020 | Apr 30, 2020 | 57 | 210 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 3 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 2 | Mar 03, 2020 | Apr 16, 2020 | 44 | 235 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 4 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 3 | Mar 05, 2020 | Apr 10, 2020 | 36 | 99 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 5 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 4 | Mar 05, 2020 | Mar 30, 2020 | 25 | 100 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 6 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 5 | Mar 06, 2020 | Apr 16, 2020 | 41 | 67 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 7 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 7 | Mar 09, 2020 | Apr 24, 2020 | 46 | 376 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 8 | Gyeongbuk-daegu 8 | Mar 10, 2020 | Apr 20, 2020 | 41 | 280 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 9 | Chungnam-daegu 1 | Mar 06, 2020 | Mar 27, 2020 | 21 | 600 | Group education | Chungnam |
| 10 | Gyeongbuk 1 | Mar 05, 2020 | Apr 25, 2020 | 51 | 56 | Group education | Gyeongbuk |
| 11 | Daegu 2 | Mar 08, 2020 | Mar 28, 2020 | 20 | 490 | Dormitory | Daegu |
| 12 | Chungbuk-daegu 1 | Mar 09, 2020 | Apr 05, 2020 | 27 | 136 | Group education | Chungbuk |
| 13 | Chungbuk-daegu 2 | Mar 08, 2020 | Mar 29, 2020 | 21 | 170 | Recreation | Chungbuk |
| 14 | Jeonbuk-daegu 1 | Mar 11, 2020 | Apr 07, 2020 | 27 | 210 | Group education | Jeonbuk |
| 15 | Chungbuk-daegu 3 | Mar 12, 2020 | Apr 08, 2020 | 27 | 179 | Group education | Chungbuk |
| 16 | Chungbuk-daegu 4 | Mar 13, 2020 | Apr 10, 2020 | 28 | 450 | Group education | Chungbuk |
| 17 | Gyeonggi-international 1a | Mar 25, 2020 | Apr 28, 2020 | 31 | 70 | Group education | Gyeonggi |
| Apr 29, 2020 | Continue | - | 45 | Group education | Gyeonggi | ||
| 18 | Gyeonggi-international 2 | Mar 27, 2020 | May 15, 2020 | 50 | 200 | Group education | Gyeonggi |
Fig. 1Establishment and operation flow of RTC.
Blue Box (establishment, operation, and close of RTC): The Ministry of Health & Welfare and local governments may decide to establish the RTC. They secure facilities for RTCs and carry out planning, staffing, and resources management.
Orange Box (admission, isolation, and discharge of patients): when a COVID-19 patient is confirmed through screening treatment, the patient management team immediately assesses the severity and assigns a bed. Patients with mild symptoms are admitted immediately after being assigned to RTC, undergoing a basic medical examination, and quarantined until criteria for lifting isolation is satisfied.
RTC = residential treatment center, COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.
Requirements of residential treatment center
| Item | Requirements |
|---|---|
| Location | - (Geography) Facilities away from downtown and residential area |
| - (Structure) Separation of movement routes and air circulation between contaminated and clean zone | |
| System | - (CCTV and Broadcasting) 24-hr CCTV and broadcasting system for maintenance of order and breakaway prevention |
| - (Ventilation) Blocking air circulation between zones and natural ventilation through air conditioning system | |
| Isolation Rooms | - A room for one person (two or more people from the same group permitted restrictively) |
| - Providing bedroom, shower facility (water supply/drainage), and toilet | |
| - Air separation between rooms and natural ventilation | |
| - Treatment facilities (for simple treatment and first aid) | |
| - TV, Internet, and telephone available | |
| Working and living facility | - Creating an office environment based on work details and movement routes |
| - Air separation between the zones and natural ventilation | |
| - A room for one or two people as for living facility and maintaining optimal temperature | |
| - Providing individual or shared shower facility, toilet, and laundry facility | |
| - TV, Internet, and telephone available | |
| Area separation | - Separation of contaminated zone and clean zone by designating individual building as each zone |
| - Separation of movement routes and floor in case of contaminated zone and clean zone existing in the same building | |
| - Installation of PPE changing room outdoor or in separate structure (i.e. containers) | |
| - Installation of temporary waste storage outdoor or in separate structure (i.e. containers) | |
| Safety & security | - (Outside) Securing transportation for patients’ transfer to hospital |
| - (Inside) Measures to prevent fall accidents from balconies and stairs | |
| - (Inside) Securing fire prevention facilities (preparation of fire extinguisher, sprinkler, and emergency exit map) | |
| - (Inside) Access control for facilities that can damage the body | |
| - (Outside & Inside) 24-hr CCTV for prevention of breakaway, and maintenance of security and order | |
| - (Outside & Inside) Broadcasting system for announcement |
PPE = personal protective equipment.
Fig. 2Separating zones of the one-building center.
• Designating contaminated/clean zone by floor.
• Blocking indoor air circulation and natural ventilation in all zones.
• Preparing a neutral zone between contaminated zone and clean zone.
• Restriction on patients' movement between floors (permit only when admission, waste disposal, etc.).
The average number of patients and staffs at residential treatment center (n = 18) (unit: person)
| No. of patients | No. of staffs | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Non-medical | Medical | |||||
| Subtotal | Physician | Nurse | Others | ||||
| Mean (n = 18) | 98.4 ± 77.8 | 63.71 ± 23.96 | 34.1 ± 13.8 | 29.6 ± 14.6 | 6.0 ± 2.8 | 8.8 ± 3.9 | 7.4 ± 4.6 |
| < 100 (n = 4)a | 36.1 ± 26.9 | 44.94 ± 12.23 | 26.1 ± 11.7 | 18.8 ± 7.9 | 4.9 ± 1.5 | 6.0 ± 2.0 | 4.0 ± 3.5 |
| 100–199 (n = 5)b | 87.0 ± 41.7 | 58.65 ± 17.88 | 30.7 ± 11.0 | 27.9 ± 8.1 | 5.4 ± 1.9 | 7.3 ± 2.2 | 7.6 ± 2.7 |
| 200–299 (n = 5)c | 111.9 ± 70.6 | 64.58 ± 11.34 | 37.8 ± 6.2 | 26.8 ± 7.5 | 5.0 ± 1.6 | 9.0 ± 1.8 | 6.4 ± 3.3 |
| 300–399 (n = 4)d | 178.9 ± 96.2 | 95.91 ± 27.71 | 43.5 ± 18.5 | 52.4 ± 14.6 | 10.1 ± 3.4 | 14.5 ± 4.6 | 13.8 ± 3.7 |
Values are presented as mean ± standard deviation.
aGyeongbuk-daegu 3/Gyeongbuk-daegu 5/Gyeongbuk 1/Gyeonggi-international 1; bDaegu 1/Gyeongbuk-daegu 4/Chungbuk-daegu 1/Chungbuk-daegu 2/Chungbuk-daegu 3; cGyeongbuk-daegu 1/Gyeongbuk-daegu 2/Gyeongbuk-daegu 8/Jeonbuk-daegu 1/Gyeonggi-international 2; dGyeongbuk-daegu 7/Chungnam-daegu 1/Daegu 2/Chungbuk-daegu 4.
Workforce of RTC and duties
| Workforce | Duty |
|---|---|
| Public officials and operation personnel | - Administrative action including contraction and buying for disinfection, cleaning, waste disposal, laundry, and food & beverage supply |
| - Daily action report including RTC’s situation and waste disposal declaration | |
| - Purchase of supplies including food & beverages, daily necessities, and office equipment (procuring food & beverages from nearby restaurant or lunch box suppliers) | |
| Medical personnel | - Checking health status for patients newly admitted to the center |
| - Daily examination and monitoring for patients and staffs (twice a day), and simple medical treatment | |
| - Collecting specimens and requesting tests | |
| - Patients’ transfer to hospital and decision making on quarantine discharge | |
| - Informing patients on matters to observe after quarantine discharge | |
| - Prevention of further infection within the center by training non-medical workers to wear PPE properly | |
| - Recording all kinds of medical treatment or measurements | |
| Police officers | - Control over breakaway from and access to the center via 24 hr CCTV, and maintenance of order |
| Firefighters | - Taking a patient to an affiliated hospital, deploying workforce urgently, and doing safety inspection |
| Soldiers | - Distributing food & beverages, daily necessities, and waste container |
| Facility managers | - Functional checkout and adjustment of the installation in the center |
| Disinfection/cleaning/laundry companies | - Disinfection and general cleaning of the center, collecting and washing staff’s laundry (at least once a day) |
| - Isolated patients’ clothes must be washed individually within the room | |
| Waste disposal companies | - Disposal of waste from the center (once a day) |
RTC = residential treatment center, PPE = personal protective equipment.
Fig. 3Staff distribution by the number of patients. Group 1 implies less than 100 patients, Group 2 implies 100 to less than 200 patients, Group3 implies 200 to less than 300 patients, and Group 4 implies more than 300 patients.