| Literature DB >> 35657795 |
Hamid Ravaghi1, Vanessa Naidoo2, Awad Mataria1, Merette Khalil1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During rapidly evolving outbreaks, health services and essential medical care are interrupted as facilities have become overwhelmed responding to COVID-19. In the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR), more than half of countries are affected by emergencies, hospitals face complex challenges as they respond to humanitarian crises, maintain essential services, and fight the pandemic. While hospitals in the EMR have adapted to combat COVID-19, evidence-based and context-specific recommendations are needed to guide policymakers and hospital managers on best practices to strengthen hospitals' readiness, limit the impact of the pandemic, and create lasting hospital sector improvements towards recovery and resilience. AIM: Guided by the WHO/EMR's "Hospital readiness checklist for COVID-19", this study presents the experiences of EMR hospitals in combatting COVID-19 across the 22 EMR countries, including their challenges and interventions across the checklist domains, to inform improvements to pandemic preparedness, response, policy, and practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35657795 PMCID: PMC9165776 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0268386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1Hospitals’ readiness checklist for COVID-19 (WHO/EMRO, 2020).
Fig 2PRISMA chart for literature review and articles inclusion.
Fig 3Challenges of hospitals in the EMR related to medicines, supplies, equipment (n = 139), July 2020.
Fig 4Challenges faced by hospitals in the EMR related to human resources (n = 139), July 2020.
Fig 5Strategies to manage non-essential patient flow in hospitals in the EMR (n = 139), July 2020.
Fig 6Interventions to limit the nosocomial transmission of COVID-19 in EMR hospitals (N = 139).
Summary of main themes for EMR hospitals’ challenges and interventions by checklist domain.
| Domains/Themes | Challenges | Interventions |
|---|---|---|
|
| Newness/stigmatization of virus | Anticipate surges = proactive action |
|
| Delays & inefficiencies in planning | National preparedness and response plans |
|
| Initial resistance to deal with COVID-19 | Hospital-wide codes, simulation exercises, daily risk and epidemiological briefings |
|
| Politicization of Response | Multisectoral and multispecialty response committees |
|
| Shortages of supplies/ PPEs, ICU beds, ventilators | Centralized procurement & distribution |
|
| Public distrust | Communication with the public (i.e. Hotlines, Call centers, prints, messages, social media, Engaging religious and community leaders, Daily news reports, Designating official spokespersons for hospitals, Using mobile applications and GIS) |
|
| Shortage of critical care, infectious diseases, emergency, radiology, IPC, and respiratory specialists and nurses (especially in LMICs/FCS) | Recruit for surge (i.e., Better HRH planning and distribution based on need/surge, Task-shifting/training different specialties, Hiring international staff, Volunteers, retirees, and fresh medical graduates) |
|
| Closure of health facilities | Strategies and Guidelines to maintain EHS (WHO guide) |
|
| Limited and centralized testing capacity affected by shortage of kits, shortage of qualified lab personnel, inadequate triage and isolation spaces for suspected cases | Scaling up testing capacity |
|
| Designated hospitals overwhelmed (limited spaces for isolation and treatment) | Designating COVID-19 facilities (i.e., Space outside main hospital buildings, zoning, Converting wards for ICU/triage/isolation, alternate care sites, PPPs, Purchasing new equipment/beds for critical care) |
|
| PPE shortages and early overuse | IPC measures and trainings |