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Download The Emergency Department in the Post SARS era
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The Emergency Department in the Post SARS era Peter Cameron Previously Prince of Wales Hospital Chinese University of Hong Kong Emergency Department First line -The Problem • Ability of ED to identify Potential high risk patients – SARS demonstrated that non specific features most common • EDs Poorly constructed to manage an Infectious Disease Outbreak • Processes within ED increase risk • Staff not good at basic ID control procedures • Balance between high volume service commitments and potential risk ED as first line • Communication with hospital • Communication with community • Communication with region SARS It is not ”Severe” Or “Acute” Or “Respiratory” At the outset Front line experience with SARS • ICU and Ward healthcare workers more at risk than ED • Cross infection amongst patients was less than expected • Despite high risk environment many HCWs did not follow guidelines • Virtually all hospital infections could have been prevented by basic infection control Staff getting sicker Future Potential Risk • SARS could come back • Other infectious disease outbreaks could occur – Most likely Influenza • Routine presentations(eg TB,gastro) put patients/staff at risk • Therefore at a staff health and safety level action should be taken Response • • • • • Engineering Patient Processes Staff training PPE Outbreak response Engineering • Avoid crowded EDs – >1 m between pts • Where possible have physical barriers between patients – Separate hand washing for each pt • Avoid prolonged stay in ED – Separate toileting – Washing • Ventilation – negative pressure rooms? • Adequate sewage system Busy ED Shut Down By the Plague? • Emergency closed at PWH • No elective operations at PWH Patient Processes • Track pt cohorts through different areas – Eg injury/fever • Avoid unnecessary pt contact • Separate work bench areas from pt care areas • Avoid high risk procedures where possible – Eg nebulisers/NIVA • Avoid unnecessary admissions – Hospitals dangerous places – Avoid Unnecessary Patient movement b/n areas • Only necessary Traffic through ED Staff Training • Accredit staff in ID procedures • Audit infection control • Incorporate into undergraduate training Droplet Precautions in every ward Personal Protective equipment • Simplicity • Long term practicality • Masks/handwashing easy – N95 vs surgical masks? • Space suits expensive and impractical • Identify particularly high risk groups – Eg contact history/atypical/severe presentation or procedures – eg ETT – ?triage to different area/negative pressure Outbreak response • Local • Regional • National/International Local • Identification of Outbreak – Background monitoring – Awareness through health department – Unusual case • ++High Index of Suspicion • Command team • Communication • Contact tracing Predetermined Communication Protocol • • • • • Meetings of Senior staff Departmental meeting Staff Forum Email Web site Rumours are always worse than reality Local • Screening – in community + hospital – Best site? • ED • OPD • Health Department – Facilities • XRAY • CT • PATHOLOGY • PPE • VENTILATION • SPACE Local • • • • Plan for service distribution in outbreak Knowledge of resources Practice Incorporation of plan into normal service Regional • Above issues + • Schools • Public announcements – panic vs ignorance – Experience suggests that transparency creates less panic • Quarantine – – – – Restrictions on movement cause panic May lead to opposite effects to what you want Effectiveness of home quarantine? Is it right to house those with disease and without together? National/International • Effect on economy/business/Travel Vs International responsibilities • Resources diverted to maintain infrastructure/training for possible outbreak vs provide routine services Every Hospital Should Have • • • • A disaster Plan An infectious disease outbreak plan Regular review/audit and practice of plan Integration with regional hospitals and ambulance • Disease monitoring and reporting capability Unsolved Problems • Specialised ID hospital takes all? – At Princess Margaret in HK–quickly overwhelmed – Danger that expertise is concentrated – Also abrogation of responsibility from non specialised hospitals – Primary triage to right hospital first time preferable – However • In small numbers –processes at ID hospital good • Allows collaboration b/n experts – Mixed model may be best Unsolved Problems • Staff Quarantine? – May lose staff • Immediate • Long term – Alternatives can be almost as bad • Eg no physical contact etc • Visitor policy – Introduce early • But very hard on pts/relatives Unsolved Problems • Contact Quarantine – Ideally all isolated – BUT • Facilities • Cross infection • Deters people from coming forward – Compromise • High risk – formal quarantine • Low risk - +responsible Home with restrictions Conclusion • The biggest gains in risk reduction – – – – Simple infection control measures Simple ED design changes Staff training/auditing Good ED pt processes • ie avoid overcrowding etc • Little evidence for negative pressure/space suits/ID hospitals – This is probably true even for diseases other than SARS