Abstract
The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV2 emerged in December 2019 and is now pandemic. Initial analysis suggests that 5% of infected patients will require critical care, and that respiratory failure requiring intubation is associated with high mortality.Sick patients are geographically dispersed: most patients will remain in situ until they are in need of critical care. Additionally, there are likely to be patients who require retrieval for other reasons but who are co-incidentally infected with SARS-CoV-2 or shedding virus.The COVID-19 pandemic therefore poses a challenge to critical care retrieval systems, which often depend on small teams of specialists who live and work together closely. The infection or quarantining of a small absolute number of these staff could catastrophically compromise service delivery.Avoiding occupational exposure to COVID-19, and thereby ensuring service continuity, is the primary objective of aeromedical retrieval services during the pandemic. In this discussion paper we collaborated with helicopter emergency medical services(HEMS) worldwide to identify risks in retrieving COVID-19 patients, and develop strategies to mitigate these.Simulation involving the whole aeromedical retrieval team ensures that safety concerns can be addressed during the development of a standard operating procedure. Some services tested personal protective equipment and protocols in the aeromedical environment with simulation. We also incorporated experiences, standard operating procedures and approaches across several HEMS services internationally.As a result of this collaboration, we outline an approach to the safe aeromedical retrieval of a COVID-19 patient, and describe how this framework can be used to develop a local standard operating procedure.
Highlights
The SARS-CoV-2 virus, pandemic since March 2020 [1], causes the clinical syndrome of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) [2,3,4]
There should be a risk assessment at a regional/institutional level, preferably with retrieval clinician and crew input, which culminates in clear agreement on the circumstances in which it is appropriate for a service to undertake transfers of confirmed COVID-19 cases, and what precautions should be taken in patients who do not have confirmed infection
Personal correspondence with other retrieval services has suggested that Helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) crew members have inadvertently been exposed to SARS-CoV-2 by patients in whom the initial tasking seemed unrelated to respiratory disease
Summary
The SARS-CoV-2 virus, pandemic since March 2020 [1], causes the clinical syndrome of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) [2,3,4]. Most infections are mild or asymptomatic and upper respiratory tract symptoms, when present, are responsible for droplet spread of the pathogen. In some patients, especially the elderly, or those with cardiovascular or respiratory comorbidities [3, 4], infection causes respiratory failure, with potentially severe hypoxia. Aeromedical retrieval services will be involved in treating and transporting patients with known or suspected COVID-19. This will primarily be those who are severely affected and require intensive care support [5], and patients with other pathology who are incidentally coinfected. This article outlines the planning that such organizations should undertake prior to retrieving patients who may have COVID-19, and suggests a model for the management of severe cases of COVID-19 on helicopters
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More From: Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
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