| Literature DB >> 33408440 |
J Terrence Jose Jerome1, Francisco Mercier2, Chaitanya S Mudgal3,4, Joan Arenas-Prat5, Gustavo Vinagre6, Chul Ki Goorens33, Ignacio J Rivera-Chavarría8, Sreedharan Sechachalam9, Bolaji Mofikoya10, Achilleas Thoma11, Claudia Medina12, Ignacio J Rivera-Chavarría8, Mark Henry13, Ahmadreza Afshar14, Zoe H Dailiana15, Theddeus O H Prasetyono16, Stefano Artiaco17, Thayur R Madhusudhan18, Skender Ukaj19, Ole Reigstad20, Yoshitaka Hamada21, Rajesh Bedi22, Andrea Poggetti23, Mohammad Manna Al-Qattan24, Mahdi Siala25, Anand Viswanathan26, Rafael Romero-Reveron27, Joon Pio Hong28, Kamarul Ariffin Khalid29, Shivashankar Bhaskaran30, Krishnamoorthy Venkatadass31, Somsak Leechavengvongs32, Chul Ki Goorens33, Sifi Nazim34, Alexandru Valentin Georgescu35, Mathias Tremp36, Kiran K Nakarmi37, Mohamed A Ellabban38, Pingtak Chan39, Andrey Aristov40, Sandeep Patel41, Constanza L Moreno-Serrano42, Shwetabh Rai43, Rishi Mugesh Kanna44, Vijay A Malshikare45, Katsuhisa Tanabe46, Simon Thomas47, Kemal Gokkus48, Seung-Hoon Baek49, Jerker Brandt50, Yin Rith51, Alfredo Olazabal52, Muhammad Saaiq53, Vijay Patil54, N Jithendran55, Harshil Parekh56, Yoshitaka Minamikawa57, Abdulljawad Almabrouk Atagawi58, Jalal Ahmed Hadi59, Claudia Arroyo Berezowsky60, Joaquin Moya-Angeler61, Marco Antonio Altamirano-Cruz62, Luz Adriana Galvis R63, Alex Antezana64, Lukasz Paczesny65, Carlos Henrique Fernandes66, Md Asadullah67, Lo Yuan-Shun68, Biser Makelov69, Chaitanya Dodakundi70, Rabindra Regmi71, Ganarlo Urquizo Pereira72, Shuwei Zhang73, Binoy Sayoojianadhan74, Ivan Callupe75, Mohamed I Rakha76, Dino Papes77, Ramesh Prabu Ganesan78, Mukesh Mohan79, Arun Jeyaraman80, Ponnaian Prabhakar81, Arungeethayan Rajniashokan82, I Geethan79, Sugavanam Chandrasekar83, Steffen Löw84, Kannan Thangavelu85, Luca Dei Giudici86, Yuvarajan Palanisamy87, Singaravadivelu Vaidyanathan88, Jorge Boretto89, Monica Alexandra Ramirez90, Thirumalaisamy Subbiah Goundar91, Thirumavalavan Kuppusamy92, Kalaivanan Kanniyan93, Atul Srivastava94, Yung-Cheng Chiu95, Anil K Bhat96, Nalli R Gopinath97, Vijayaraghavan P Vasudevan98, Vineet Abraham99.
Abstract
With a lot of uncertainty, unclear, and frequently changing management protocols, COVID-19 has significantly impacted the orthopaedic surgical practice during this pandemic crisis. Surgeons around the world needed closed introspection, contemplation, and prospective consensual recommendations for safe surgical practice and prevention of viral contamination. One hundred orthopaedic surgeons from 50 countries were sent a Google online form with a questionnaire explicating protocols for admission, surgeries, discharge, follow-up, relevant information affecting their surgical practices, difficulties faced, and many more important issues that happened during and after the lockdown. Ten surgeons critically construed and interpreted the data to form rationale guidelines and recommendations. Of the total, hand and microsurgery surgeons (52%), trauma surgeons (32%), joint replacement surgeons (20%), and arthroscopy surgeons (14%) actively participated in the survey. Surgeons from national public health care/government college hospitals (44%) and private/semiprivate practitioners (54%) were involved in the study. Countries had lockdown started as early as January 3, 2020 with the implementation of partial or complete lifting of lockdown in few countries while writing this article. Surgeons (58%) did not stop their surgical practice or clinics but preferred only emergency cases during the lockdown. Most of the surgeons (49%) had three-fourths reduction in their total patients turn-up and the remaining cases were managed by conservative (54%) methods. There was a 50 to 75% reduction in the number of surgeries. Surgeons did perform emergency procedures without COVID-19 tests but preferred reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR; 77%) and computed tomography (CT) scan chest (12%) tests for all elective surgical cases. Open fracture and emergency procedures (60%) and distal radius (55%) fractures were the most commonly performed surgeries. Surgeons preferred full personal protection equipment kits (69%) with a respirator (N95/FFP3), but in the case of unavailability, they used surgical masks and normal gowns. Regional/local anesthesia (70%) remained their choice for surgery to prevent the aerosolized risk of contaminations. Essential surgical follow-up with limited persons and visits was encouraged by 70% of the surgeons, whereas teleconsultation and telerehabilitation by 30% of the surgeons. Despite the protective equipment, one-third of the surgeons were afraid of getting infected and 56% feared of infecting their near and dear ones. Orthopaedic surgeons in private practice did face 50 to 75% financial loss and have to furlough 25% staff and 50% paramedical persons. Orthopaedics meetings were cancelled, and virtual meetings have become the preferred mode of sharing the knowledge and experiences avoiding human contacts. Staying at home, reading, and writing manuscripts became more interesting and an interesting lifestyle change is seen among the surgeons. Unanimously and without any doubt all accepted the fact that COVID-19 pandemic has reached an unprecedented level where personal hygiene, hand washing, social distancing, and safe surgical practices are the viable antidotes, and they have all slowly integrated these practices into their lives. Strict adherence to local authority recommendations and guidelines, uniform and standardized norms for admission, inpatient, and discharge, mandatory RT-PCR tests before surgery and in selective cases with CT scan chest, optimizing and regularizing the surgeries, avoiding and delaying nonemergency surgeries and follow-up protocols, use of teleconsultations cautiously, and working in close association with the World Health Organization and national health care systems will provide a conducive and safe working environment for orthopaedic surgeons and their fraternity and also will prevent the resurgence of COVID-19. Society of Indian Hand & Microsurgeons. This article is published by Thieme.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; consensus; initial and mid-lockdown phases; orthopaedics surgery; rationale treatment; recommendations
Year: 2020 PMID: 33408440 PMCID: PMC7773504 DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1713964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hand Microsurg ISSN: 0974-3227