COVID-19 and Disruptive Modifications to Cardiac Critical Care Delivery: Review Topic of the Week

The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a major unanticipated stress on the workforce, organizational structure, systems of care, and critical resource supplies. To ensure provider safety, to maximize efficiency, and to optimize patient outcomes, health systems need to be agile. Critical care cardiologi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2020-04, Vol.76 (1), p.72-84
Hauptverfasser: Katz, Jason N., Sinha, Shashank S., Alviar, Carlos L., Dudzinski, David M., Gage, Ann, Brusca, Samuel B., Flanagan, M. Casey, Welch, Timothy, Geller, Bram J., Miller, P. Elliott, Leonardi, Sergio, Bohula, Erin A., Price, Susanna, Chaudhry, Sunit-Preet, Metkus, Thomas S., O’Brien, Connor G., Sionis, Alessandro, Barnett, Christopher F., Jentzer, Jacob C., Solomon, Michael A., Morrow, David A., van Diepen, Sean
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container_end_page 84
container_issue 1
container_start_page 72
container_title Journal of the American College of Cardiology
container_volume 76
creator Katz, Jason N.
Sinha, Shashank S.
Alviar, Carlos L.
Dudzinski, David M.
Gage, Ann
Brusca, Samuel B.
Flanagan, M. Casey
Welch, Timothy
Geller, Bram J.
Miller, P. Elliott
Leonardi, Sergio
Bohula, Erin A.
Price, Susanna
Chaudhry, Sunit-Preet
Metkus, Thomas S.
O’Brien, Connor G.
Sionis, Alessandro
Barnett, Christopher F.
Jentzer, Jacob C.
Solomon, Michael A.
Morrow, David A.
van Diepen, Sean
description The COVID-19 pandemic has presented a major unanticipated stress on the workforce, organizational structure, systems of care, and critical resource supplies. To ensure provider safety, to maximize efficiency, and to optimize patient outcomes, health systems need to be agile. Critical care cardiologists may be uniquely positioned to treat the numerous respiratory and cardiovascular complications of the SARS-CoV-2 and support clinicians without critical care training who may be suddenly asked to care for critically ill patients. This review draws upon the experiences of colleagues from heavily impacted regions of the United States and Europe, as well as lessons learned from military mass casualty medicine. This review offers pragmatic suggestions on how to implement scalable models for critical care delivery, cultivate educational tools for team training, and embrace technologies (e.g., telemedicine) to enable effective collaboration despite social distancing imperatives. • Acute complications of COVID-19 can result in severe perturbations of the respiratory, cardiovascular, and immune systems. • Critical care cardiologists may be uniquely positioned to develop and disseminate novel solutions to meet patient and workforce demands. • Many opportunities exist to develop scalable models of critical care delivery and effective research collaboration.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.04.029
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title COVID-19 and Disruptive Modifications to Cardiac Critical Care Delivery: Review Topic of the Week
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