Abstract

The countrywide lockdown in India has necessitated healthcare providers consider alternate options for providing care during the COVID-19 pandemic. While there has been a tremendous focus in coping with emergency and inpatient care for COVID-19 related illness, there is also an increasing need to address management of non-communicable disease. The pandemic and the associated lockdown have witnessed the onset or worsening of sleep disorders often related to changing lifestyle, including inactivity, fear of the disease, and generalised anxiety caused by the uncertainty of the future. We propose the term ‘Lockdown Sleep Syndrome’ to describe this grouping of signs and symptoms. The wide coverage and extensive use of smartphones and more importantly, the appropriately timed Telemedicine Practice Guidelines from the Government of India, have made telehealth an attractive option, particularly in specialities such as Sleep Medicine which involves minimal physical examination. The experience of restricting personal visits to the clinic and promoting teleconsultation during the initial fifty days of lockdown is described. It was observed that two thirds of consultations shifted to a telehealth platform, and this was effective in giving satisfactory care and valid prescriptions, including to those outside the city of Chennai. Telemedicine not only helped provide uncompromised care to existing patients but also helped in identifying and managing the onset of new sleep problems with a pattern of signs and symptoms which are described as “Lockdown Sleep Syndrome”.

Highlights

  • The countrywide lockdown in India has necessitated healthcare providers consider alternate options for providing care during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • In India, the National Telemedicine Taskforce was established by the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoH&FW) in 2005

  • India has been subject to a countrywide lockdown initiated on 24 March 2020 that was extended several times until 30 June 2020, which has forced people to remain indoors

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Summary

Introduction

The countrywide lockdown in India has necessitated healthcare providers consider alternate options for providing care during the COVID-19 pandemic. India has been subject to a countrywide lockdown initiated on 24 March 2020 that was extended several times until 30 June 2020, which has forced people to remain indoors.4 While the primary concern during this period has been the diagnosis and treatment of COVID-19, it is essential to address non-COVID emergencies and routine care of patients with chronic diseases. NITI has actively monitored and implemented programmes and initiatives for capacity building in various areas of potential growth, and worked with the Medical Council of India (MCI) to develop simplified telemedicine guidelines which were released in March 2020.5 The timing was fortuitous and facilitated the expansion and reach of services of primary care physicians and specialists to manage chronic non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in addition to COVID-19 and non-COVID emergencies.

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