Author: Akhtar, Naseem; Rajan, Shiv; Chakrabarti, Deep; Kumar, Vijay; Gupta, Sameer; Misra, Sanjeev; Chaturvedi, Arun; Azhar, Tashbihul; Parveen, Shirin; Qayoom, Sumaira; Niranjan, Palavalasa; Tiwari, Shashwat
Title: Continuing cancer surgery through the first six months of the COVIDâ€19 pandemic at an academic university hospital in India: A lowerâ€middleâ€income country experience Cord-id: y19thuim Document date: 2021_2_10
ID: y19thuim
Snippet: BACKGROUND: The novel coronavirus pandemic (COVIDâ€19) hinders the treatment of nonâ€COVID illnesses like cancer, which may be pronounced in lowerâ€middleâ€income countries. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study audited the performance of a tertiary care surgical oncology department at an academic hospital in India during the first six months of the pandemic. Difficulties faced by patients, COVIDâ€19â€related incidents (preventable cases of hospital transmission), and modifications in p
Document: BACKGROUND: The novel coronavirus pandemic (COVIDâ€19) hinders the treatment of nonâ€COVID illnesses like cancer, which may be pronounced in lowerâ€middleâ€income countries. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study audited the performance of a tertiary care surgical oncology department at an academic hospital in India during the first six months of the pandemic. Difficulties faced by patients, COVIDâ€19â€related incidents (preventable cases of hospital transmission), and modifications in practice were recorded. RESULTS: From April to September 2020, outpatient consultations, inpatient admissions, and chemotherapy unit functioning reduced by 62%, 58%, and 56%, respectively, compared to the same period the previous year. Major surgeries dropped by 31% with a decrease across all sites, but an increase in head and neck cancers (p = .012, absolute difference 8%, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.75% — 14.12%). Postoperative complications were similar (p = .593, 95% CI: −2.61% — 4.87%). Inability to keep a surgical appointment was primarily due to apprehension of infection (52%) or arranging finances (49%). Two COVIDâ€19â€related incidents resulted in infecting 27 persons. Fifteen instances of possible COVIDâ€19â€related mishaps were averted. CONCLUSIONS: We observed a decrease in the operations of the department without any adverse impact in postoperative outcomes. While challenging, treating cancer adequately during COVIDâ€19 can be accomplished by adequate screening and testing, and religiously following the prevention guidelines.
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