How to prioritize patients and redesign care to safely resume planned surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic

Restarting planned surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic is a clinical and societal priority, but it is unknown whether it can be done safely and include high-risk or complex cases. We developed a Surgical Prioritization and Allocation Guide (SPAG). Here, we validate its effectiveness and safety in C...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bone & joint open 2021-02, Vol.2 (2), p.134-140
Hauptverfasser: Logishetty, Kartik, Edwards, Thomas C, Subbiah Ponniah, Hariharan, Ahmed, Marriam, Liddle, Alexander D, Cobb, Justin, Clark, Callum
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Restarting planned surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic is a clinical and societal priority, but it is unknown whether it can be done safely and include high-risk or complex cases. We developed a Surgical Prioritization and Allocation Guide (SPAG). Here, we validate its effectiveness and safety in COVID-free sites. A multidisciplinary surgical prioritization committee developed the SPAG, incorporating procedural urgency, shared decision-making, patient safety, and biopsychosocial factors; and applied it to 1,142 adult patients awaiting orthopaedic surgery. Patients were stratified into four priority groups and underwent surgery at three COVID-free sites, including one with access to a high dependency unit (HDU) or intensive care unit (ICU) and specialist resources. Safety was assessed by the number of patients requiring inpatient postoperative HDU/ICU admission, contracting COVID-19 within 14 days postoperatively, and mortality within 30 days postoperatively. A total of 1,142 patients were included, 47 declined surgery, and 110 were deemed high-risk or requiring specialist resources. In the ten-week study period, 28 high-risk patients underwent surgery, during which 68% (13/19) of Priority 2 (P , surgery within one month) patients underwent surgery, and 15% (3/20) of P (< three months) and 16% (11/71) of P (> three months) groups. Of the 1,032 low-risk patients, 322 patients underwent surgery. Overall, 21 P and P patients were expedited to 'Urgent' based on biopsychosocial factors identified by the SPAG. During the study period, 91% (19/21) of the Urgent group, 52% (49/95) of P , 36% (70/196) of P , and 26% (184/720) of P underwent surgery. No patients died or were admitted to HDU/ICU, or contracted COVID-19. Our widely generalizable model enabled the restart of planned surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic, without compromising patient safety or excluding high-risk or complex cases. Patients classified as Urgent or P were most likely to undergo surgery, including those deemed high-risk. This model, which includes assessment of biopsychosocial factors alongside disease severity, can assist in equitably prioritizing the substantial list of patients now awaiting planned orthopaedic surgery worldwide. Cite this article:  2021;2(2):134-140.
ISSN:2633-1462
DOI:10.1302/2633-1462.22.BJO-2020-0200.R1