Abstract

Sabah in Malaysian Borneo is among the Malaysian states which reported a high number of detected COVID-19 cases during the current pandemic. Due to geographical challenges and limited resources, clinicians developed novel strategies for managing patients. The use of a dual oxygen concentrator system for mechanical ventilation is one of the innovations developed by retrieval team members from the Emergency Department (ED) of the Sabah Women and Children’s Hospital. Due to conditions requiring isolation of patients suspected of or positive for COVID-19, high-risk patients were treated in an ED extension area that lacked central wall oxygen. Direct access to oxygen tanks became the only viable option, but ensuring a continuous supply was laborious. The novel setup described within this paper has been used on intubated patients in the ED extension area with moderate to high ventilator settings successfully. This simple setup, designed to meet the limited resources within a pandemic environment, needed only a turbine-driven ventilator, two oxygen concentrators, a 3-way connector, and three oxygen tubing. The application of this setup could potentially save more critically ill patients who are being managed in resource-limited conditions such as in smaller district hospitals or out in the field.

Highlights

  • Sabah is a state in Malaysia located on the northern portion of Borneo

  • Oxygen supply posed a great challenge as there was no central oxygen supply, so teams resorted to oxygen tanks and oxygen concentrators for supply

  • An average built patient with a body weight of 70 kg, with ventilator settings of tidal volume 420 mL, positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) 5mmHg, respiratory rate 12/min, and a fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) 0.5, at least 2 size E oxygen tanks are needed for a 2-h journey

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Summary

Introduction

Sabah is a state in Malaysia located on the northern portion of Borneo. A major part of Sabah is surrounded by jungle and mountains which often pose a problem when it comes to transferring and treating patients in rural settings. An average built patient with a body weight of 70 kg, with ventilator settings of tidal volume 420 mL, positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) 5mmHg, respiratory rate 12/min, and a fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) 0.5, at least 2 size E oxygen tanks are needed for a 2-h journey. Our hospital retrieval teams are familiar with transferring ventilated patients using portable battery-operated oxygen concentrators when patients require low ventilator settings due to their ease of use compared to heavy and cumbersome oxygen tanks [4, 5]

Results
Conclusion

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