Human Factors and Airway Management in COVID-19 Patients: The Perfect Storm?

The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic heavily impacted healthcare workers, increasing their physical and psychological workload. Specifically, COVID-19 patients' airway management is definitely a challenging task regarding both severe and acute respiratory failure and the risk of contagion while performing a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical medicine 2022-07, Vol.11 (15), p.4271
Hauptverfasser: Cortese, Gerardo, Sorbello, Massimiliano, Di Giacinto, Ida, Cedrone, Martina, Urdaneta, Felipe, Brazzi, Luca
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container_issue 15
container_start_page 4271
container_title Journal of clinical medicine
container_volume 11
creator Cortese, Gerardo
Sorbello, Massimiliano
Di Giacinto, Ida
Cedrone, Martina
Urdaneta, Felipe
Brazzi, Luca
description The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic heavily impacted healthcare workers, increasing their physical and psychological workload. Specifically, COVID-19 patients' airway management is definitely a challenging task regarding both severe and acute respiratory failure and the risk of contagion while performing aerosol-generating procedures. The category of anesthesiologists and intensivists, the main actors of airway management, showed a poor psychological well-being and a high stress and burnout risk. Identifying and better defining the specific main SARS-CoV-2-related stressors can help them deal with and effectively plan a strategy to manage these patients in a more confident and safer way. In this review, we therefore try to analyze the relevance of human factors and non-technical skills when approaching COVID-19 patients. Lessons from the past, such as National Audit Project 4 recommendations, have taught us that safe airway management should be based on preoperative assessment, the planning of an adequate strategy, the optimization of setting and resources and the rigorous evaluation of the scenario. Despite, or thanks to, the critical issues and difficulties, the "take home lesson" that we can translate from SARS-CoV-2 to every airway management is that there can be no more room for improvisation and that creating teamwork must become a priority.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/jcm11154271
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; PubMed Central Open Access
subjects Airway management
Anxiety
Burnout
Clinical medicine
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Disease transmission
Empathy
Infections
Intubation
Medical personnel
Opinion
Pandemics
Patients
Personal protective equipment
Respiratory failure
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Stress
Well being
title Human Factors and Airway Management in COVID-19 Patients: The Perfect Storm?
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