Author: Ramsingh, Richard A. E.; Duval, Jeanâ€Luc; Rahaman, Natasha C.; Rampersad, Risshi D.; Angelini, Gianni D.; Teodori, Giovanni
Title: Adult cardiac surgery in Trinidad and Tobago during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic: Lessons from a developing country Cord-id: 3v2ij0qh Document date: 2020_8_26
ID: 3v2ij0qh
Snippet: BACKGROUND AND AIM: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic has seen the cancellation of elective cardiac surgeries worldwide. Here we report the experience of a cardiac surgery unit in a developing country in response to the COVIDâ€19 crisis. METHODS: From 6th April to 12th June 2020, 58 patients underwent urgent or emergency cardiac surgery. Data was reviewed from a prospectively entered unitâ€maintained cardiac surgery database. To ensure safe delivery of care to patients, a seri
Document: BACKGROUND AND AIM: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic has seen the cancellation of elective cardiac surgeries worldwide. Here we report the experience of a cardiac surgery unit in a developing country in response to the COVIDâ€19 crisis. METHODS: From 6th April to 12th June 2020, 58 patients underwent urgent or emergency cardiac surgery. Data was reviewed from a prospectively entered unitâ€maintained cardiac surgery database. To ensure safe delivery of care to patients, a series of strict measures were implemented which included: a parallel healthcare system maintaining a COVIDâ€19 cold site, social isolation of patients for one to 2 weeks before surgery, polymerase chain reaction testing for COVIDâ€19, 72 hours before surgery, discrete staff assigned only to cardiac surgical cases socially isolated for 2 weeks as necessary. RESULTS: The mean age at surgery was 59.7 ± 11 years and 41 (70.7%) were male. Fiftyâ€two patients were hypertensive (90%), and 32 were diabetic (55.2%). There were three emergency type A aortic dissections. Fortyâ€seven patients underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery with all but three performed offâ€pump. Fourteen cases required blood product transfusion. One patient had postoperative pneumonia associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The median length of stay was 5.7 ± 1.8 days. All patients were discharged home after rehabilitation. There were no cases of COVIDâ€19 infection among healthcare workers during the study period. CONCLUSION: These strategies allowed us to maintain a service for urgent and emergency procedures and may prove useful for larger countries when there is decrease in COVIDâ€19 cases and planning for the restart of elective cardiac surgery.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- Try single phrases listed below for: 1
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date