Author: Soneru, Codruta N.; Fernandez, Allison M.; Bradford, Victoria; Staffa, Steven J.; Raman, Vidya T.; Cravero, Joseph; Zurakowski, David; Meier, Petra M.
Title: A survey of the global impact of COVIDâ€19 on the practice of pediatric anesthesia: A study from the pediatric anesthesia COVIDâ€19 Collaborative Group Cord-id: oira2iy4 Document date: 2021_5_3
ID: oira2iy4
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Pediatric anesthesiology has been greatly impacted by COVIDâ€19 in the delivery of care to patients and to the individual providers. With this study, we sought to survey pediatric centers and highlight the variations in care related to perioperative medicine during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, including the availability of protective equipment, the practice of pediatric anesthesia, and economic impact. AIM: The aim of the survey was to determine how COVIDâ€19 directly impacted pediatri
Document: BACKGROUND: Pediatric anesthesiology has been greatly impacted by COVIDâ€19 in the delivery of care to patients and to the individual providers. With this study, we sought to survey pediatric centers and highlight the variations in care related to perioperative medicine during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, including the availability of protective equipment, the practice of pediatric anesthesia, and economic impact. AIM: The aim of the survey was to determine how COVIDâ€19 directly impacted pediatric anesthesia practices during the study period. METHODS: A survey concerning four major domains (testing, safety, clinical management/policy, economics) was developed. It was pilot tested for clarity and content by members of the Pediatric Anesthesia COVIDâ€19 Collaborative. The survey was administered by email to all Pediatric Anesthesia COVIDâ€19 Collaborative members on September 1, 2020. Respondents had six weeks to complete the survey and were instructed to answer the questions based on their institution's practice during September 1 †October 13, 2020. RESULTS: Sixtyâ€three institutions (100% response rate) participated in the COVIDâ€19 Pediatric Anesthesia Survey. Fortyâ€one hospitals (65%) were from the United States, and 35% included other countries. N95 masks were available to anesthesia teams at 91% of institutions (n = 57) (95% CI: 80%–96%). COVIDâ€19 testing criteria of anesthesia staff and guidelines to return to work varied by institution. Structured simulation training aimed at improving COVIDâ€19 safety and patient care occurred at 62% of institutions (n = 39). Pediatric anesthesiologists were economically affected by a reduction in their employer benefits and restriction of travel due to employer imposed quarantine regulations. CONCLUSION: Our data indicate that the COVIDâ€19 pandemic has impacted the testing, safety, clinical management, and economics of pediatric anesthesia practice. Further investigation into the longâ€term consequences for the specialty is indicated.
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