| Literature DB >> 33496399 |
Agustín Julián-Jiménez1, Darío Eduardo García2, Juan González Del Castillo3, Helio Penna Guimarães4, Eric Jorge García-Lamberechts3, Edgardo Menéndez5, Francisco Javier Candel González3, César Emilio Cortés Marín6, Enrique Aguilar Nilsa Romina7, Pascual Piñera Salmerón8, Ulises González Bascuñán6, Daniel Ujakow Correa Schubert9, Augusto Maldonado Gangotena10, Jesús Daniel López Tapia11, Gonzalo Camargo12, Fabián Andrés Rosas Romero13, Nelson Rodrigo Laica Sailema14, Christian Doldan Otazo15, Óscar E Buitrago Carazo16, Paulina López Terán17.
Abstract
The incidence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Latin America and Spain and its impact particularly on hospital emergency departments have been great, sustained, and unpredictable. Unfortunately, this situation will continue in the medium term, regardless of the diverse concepts and definitions used to identify cases or hypotheses about the role of staff. In the context of the worldwide pandemic, a multinational group of experts from the Latin American Working Group to Improve Care for Patients With Infection (GT-LATINFURG) has drafted various opinion papers for use by emergency care systems in the member countries. The GT-LATINFURG is comprised of representatives from the 13 scientific associations affiliated with the Latin American Federation for Emergency Medicine (FLAME). Experts from the Spanish Society of Emergency Medicine (SEMES) also participated. The present consensus statement offers protocols and recommendations to facilitate the work of hospital emergency departments with regard to key issues the group identified, namely, the need for reorganization, triage, and routine test availability. Additional issues discussed include biomarkers; clinical, laboratory, radiologic, and microbiologic criteria for identifying patients with COVID-19; and risk and prognostic factors for mortality that emergency staff can use to quickly detect severe cases in our settings.Entities:
Keywords: Biological markers; Biomarcadores; COVID-19; Características clínicas; Clinical Characteristics; Diagnosis; Diagnóstico; Emergency department; Epidemiology; Epidemiología; Estrategias de mejora; Pandemia; Pandemics; Quality improvement strategies; Servicio de Urgencias
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33496399
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emergencias ISSN: 1137-6821 Impact factor: 3.881