Abstract

The growing fear of virus transmission during the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has called for many scientists to look into the various vehicles of infection, including the potential to travel through aerosols. Few have looked into the issue that gastrointestinal (GI) procedures may produce an abundance of aerosols. The current process of risk management for clinics is to follow a clinic-specific HVAC formula, which is typically calculated once a year and assumes perfect mixing of the air within the space, to determine how many minutes each procedural room refreshes of its air between procedures when doors are closed. This formula is not designed to fit the complex dynamic of small airborne particle transport and deposition that can potentially carry the virus in clinical conditions. It results in reduced procedure throughput as well as an excess of idle time in clinics that process a large number of short procedures such as outpatient GI centers. We present and tested a new cyber-physical system that continuously monitors airborne particle counts in procedural rooms and also at the same time automatically monitors the procedural rooms’ state and flexible endoscope status without interfering with the clinic’s workflow. We use our data gathered from over 1500 GI cases in one clinical suite to understand the correlation between air quality and standard procedure types as well as identify the risks involved with any HVAC system in a clinical suite environment. Thanks to this system, we demonstrate that standard GI procedures generate large quantities of aerosols, which can potentially promote viral airborne transmission among patients and healthcare staff. We provide a solution for the clinic to improve procedure turnover times and throughput, as well as to mitigate the risk of airborne transmission of the virus.

Highlights

  • During a pandemic, such as the one of COVID-19 [1], a careful management of elective procedures must ensure that patients and staff do not take on excessive risk [2]

  • We begin with a practical example of what we have been able to measure in a clinical environment during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • The main concept is that standard large volume procedures, such as colonoscopy or EGD, practiced in outpatient centers and gastroenterology departments, can expose staff and patients to an airborne virus

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Summary

Introduction

During a pandemic, such as the one of COVID-19 [1], a careful management of elective procedures must ensure that patients and staff do not take on excessive risk [2]. This was very critical during the first wave in 2020 due to the low efficiency of tests to detect COVID-19 positive patient. It is critical to maintain the clinic’s capacity in order to keep the population healthy with preventive medicine and therapy [4] This is true for gastrointestinal (GI) centers [5,6] that are working restlessly to prevent a large number of patients from developing cancer and deliver therapy as early as needed. Focusing on GI procedures seems important because COVID-19, while being

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