| Literature DB >> 35685115 |
Nadia Nazir Jatoi1, Sana Awan1, Maham Abbasi1, Momina Mariam Marufi1, Muhammad Ahmed1, Shehzeen Fatima Memon1, Nimra Farooqui2, Maaz Hasan Khan3, Hadi Saiyid2, Abdurrahman Husain4, Kaneez Fatima1, Shahram Maroof5, Atul Malhotra4.
Abstract
COVID-19 continues to spread across borders and has proven to be a challenge for the existing healthcare system. The demand for intensivists has dramatically increased in the United States, in the backdrop of an expected lack of intensivists in many States even before the pandemic. One proposal has been to organize multidisciplinary teams functioning under one intensivist, as this approach would make use of the existing healthcare force and lessen the burden on intensivists. Another recommendation is the adaptation of Tele-ICUs, which have demonstrated constructive outcomes in the past. Moreover, ensuring the provision of all types of personal protective equipment, adequate testing and, other provisions such as mental health support, financial incentives for intensivists should be prioritized. More intensivists should be trained for the future, for which better institutional policies are essential. Copyright: Nadia Nazir Jatoi et al.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Healthcare workers; World Health Organization; intensive care unit; personal protective equipment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35685115 PMCID: PMC9146595 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.210.29956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1projected critical care physician shortage by State during COVID-19
recommendations to manage intensivist shortage for the present and future
| Recommendations for the present | Recommendations for the future |
|---|---|
| Establishing multi-disciplinary teams that include general surgeons, anesthesiologists, APPs, etc | Implementation of tele-ICUs |
| Recruiting additional workforce including ICU team members such as APPs | Introducing succession-planning into the ICU community |
| Increasing fellowship programs and training opportunities | |
| Devising better policies to attract professionals into critical care |
Figure 2workforce model adopting a tiered staffing strategy to maintain an adequate physician-patient ratio