| Literature DB >> 35300030 |
Alexandra C Brodin1, Madhura A Tamhankar1, Gideon Whitehead1, David MacKay1, Benjamin J Kim1, Joan M O'Brien1.
Abstract
Introduction: A methodology for safe recovery of an ophthalmology department during a pandemic does not currently exist. This study describes successful recovery strategies for an urban, multi-specialty ophthalmology department serving a high-risk patient population.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; coronavirus; ophthalmology; pandemic; resurgence
Year: 2022 PMID: 35300030 PMCID: PMC8921828 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S342300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Purposes of the Resurgence Task Force Subcommittees
| Subcommittee | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Clinical Visit Scheduling | -Lead the phasing back of clinical visits using a 6-tier system to assign appointment type based on urgency. |
| Surgical Scheduling | -Lead the phasing back of surgical visits using MeNTS17 to determine priority in phasing surgical appointments. |
| Telemedicine | -Manage the increase in virtual patient visits, beginning in March when non-urgent in-person appointments were cancelled. |
| Telemedicine Enhancement Pathway (TEP) | -Implement a system for providing imaging and testing to patients in-person, followed by a virtual visit (rather than an in-person visit) with a physician to discuss results and treatment plans. |
| Education and Research | -To preserve tripartite mission in compliance with evolving CDC guidelines. |
Figure 2Clinical and surgical collections, CY2019 vs CY2020. The department suffered losses in clinical and surgical collections starting in April 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In December 2020, the department surpassed December 2019 total collections.
Figure 3NEI awarded to University of Pennsylvania Investigators, FY2017-FY2020. The number of grants awarded to the department was maintained in fiscal year 2020.
Figure 4Papers published by Ophthalmology Department Faculty, FY2017-FY2020. Similar to grant funding, the fiscal 2020 did not reveal significant decrease in research productivity, as measured by papers published and high-impact publications. *High impact publications are defined by the authors as Cell Press, the Lancet Press, Nature Press, Circulation, JAMA/Arch OPH, Journal of Clinical Investigation, New England Journal of Medicine, PLOS Medicine, and Science (including Science Translational Medicine).