Difference between revisions of "Case management in Facilities"
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| − | ==Table 3== | + | = Immediate public health interventions |
| + | ==Table 3 Summary of immediate public health interventions, irrespective of transmission scenario == | ||
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| + | {| class="wikitable" | ||
| + | ! Community messaging | ||
| + | ! Messages should include the following: | ||
| + | # COVID-19 symptoms: distinction between mild symptoms versus severe symptoms. Mild patients should be isolated to reduce transmission and told to self-isolate at home and call COVID informational line for advice on testing and referral. Mild and moderate patients may be isolated either in health facility, community facilities (e.g. stadium, gymnasium, hotel or tent) with access to rapid health advice (i.e. adjacent COVID-19 dedicated health post/EMT-type 1, telemedicine) or self- isolate at home. Severely ill patients should call COVID hotline to seek emergency referral to health facility. | ||
| + | # Engage everyone in hand washing, respiratory hygiene, and physical distancing. | ||
| + | # Access local 24/7 COVID-19 telephone hotline or designated number that patients can call for information and direction about when and where they should seek care. | ||
| + | # Access local authority’s social media accounts for specific information on COVID-19. | ||
| + | # Understand community coordinated network with local government authority, public health unit/district medical officer, prehospital care services (including community health workers, community first aid responders, ambulance services) and hospitals. | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Health facility readiness | ||
| + | | | ||
| + | # Undertake a health facility readiness assessment to evaluate established health facilities response capacity. | ||
| + | # Establish or reinforce screening and triage protocols at all points of first access to the health system, including primary health care centres, clinics, and hospital emergency units.6. | ||
| + | # Ensure that each facility is able to implement basic emergency care (BEC) for seriously ill patients and then activate referral.7. | ||
| + | # Develop a supply procurement and distribution plan for personal protective equipment (PPE) and biomedical equipment (including oxygen, ventilators), including contingency plan for shortages. | ||
| + | # Develop policies for visitor restriction, e.g. visitors to confirmed cases or visitors who are sick with acute respiratory infection (ARI), including for parents or caregivers accompanying minor patients. | ||
| + | # Assess testing and lab capacity, define testing strategy, and plan for surge. | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Health staff readiness | ||
| + | | | ||
| + | # Ensure staff dedicated to communicating with patients, visitors, and media as required. | ||
| + | # Strengthen infection prevention and control (IPC) measures to mitigate health care worker (HCW) and nosocomial infection; this includes identification of IPC focal points, COVID-19 IPC training, ensuring availability of key documents at all levels of care (SOPs, communication materials – visual alerts for screening), visitors’ policy, and IPC supplies. | ||
| + | # Strengthen clinical management; training on clinical management of COVID-19 for designated clinical staff, ensuring key documents are available (SOPs, guidance). | ||
| + | # Develop staffing plans to identify and appropriately supervise staff for repurposing and surge at health facility level, based on local and national strategy. | ||
| + | # Strengthen measures for protection of occupational health, safety, and security of health workers – prevention of violence, addressing fatigue, and access to health care and social support. | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Referral system readiness8 | ||
| + | |# Communicate the details of COVID-19 designated facilities to all command and dispatch centres for appropriate destination triage. | ||
| + | # Dedicate transfer vehicles and ambulances for all suspected or confirmed COVID-19. Ensure that IPC measures are always respected during patient retrieval and transport9 and that vehicles are disinfected properly. | ||
| + | # Consider establishing expanded screening and appropriate referral pathways in community settings (e.g. fever clinics). | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Designate COVID-19 treatment areas within health facilities | ||
| + | | | ||
| + | # Establish COVID-19 treatment areas within health facilities (rooms/ward/unit) or designate separate COVID-19 hospitals. | ||
| + | ## COVID-19 treatment areas should be designed to allow implementation of all required IPC interventions. | ||
| + | ## COVID-19 treatment areas should be designed to deliver life-saving oxygen therapy. Most patients hospitalized with severe disease will need oxygen, and a smaller proportion will require ventilation. | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Establish COVID-19 surge plan. | ||
| + | | Plan for repurposing of wards for severely or critically ill patients. 2. Plan for community facilities for isolation of mild or moderate patients or for self-isolation at home. 3. Re-evaluate COVID-19 discharge criteria and disposition during recovery period. | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Maintain essential health services | ||
| + | | Establish simplified, purpose-designed, governance, and coordination mechanisms to complement response protocols. The impact of repurposing health system capacities for COVID-19 care should be evaluated on a regular basis. 2. Ensure context-relevant core health services and business continuity are not compromised. 3. Optimize or modify service delivery platforms as per context-relevant core health services. 4. Redistribute health workforce capacity as needed. 4. Develop a consultative and collaborative mechanism to establish non-urgent care priorities. | ||
| + | |} | ||
| + | |||
=References= | =References= | ||
Revision as of 07:21, 21 March 2020
Date: 19 March 2020 Source: WHO
Background
This document is intended for health ministers, health system administrators, and other decision-makers. It is meant to guide the care of COVID-19 patients as the response capacity of health systems is challenged; to ensure that COVID-19 patients can access life-saving treatment, without compromising public health objectives and safety of health workers. It promotes two key messages:
- Key public health interventions regardless of transmission scenario; and
- Key action steps to be taken by transmission scenario to enable timely surge of clinical operations.
The public health objectives at all stages of the preparedness and response plan are to:
- Prevent outbreaks, delay spread, slow and stop transmission.
- Provide optimized care for all patients, especially the seriously ill.
- Minimize the impact of the epidemic on health systems, social services, and economic activity.
Based on the largest cohort of COVID-19 patients, about 40% of patients with COVID-19 may have mild disease, where treatment is mostly symptomatic and does not require inpatient care; about 40% of patients have a moderate disease that may require inpatient care; 15% of patients will have severe disease that requires oxygen therapy or other inpatient interventions, and about 5% have a critical disease that requires mechanical ventilation.[1] However, the evolution of the outbreak in some countries has shown a higher proportion of severe and critical cases and the need to rapidly increase surge capacity to prevent the rapid exhaustion of biomedical supplies and staff. In some countries, doubling rates of cases every 3 days has been observed.[2]
Scenarios of transmission
Countries or subnational areas will have to respond rapidly to one or more epidemiological scenarios. Currently, four transmission scenarios are observed:[3]
- Countries with no cases (no cases);
- Countries with one or more cases, imported or locally acquired (sporadic cases);
- Countries experiencing cases clusters in time, geographic location, or common exposure (clusters of cases);
- Countries experiencing larger outbreaks of local transmission (community transmission).
Countries will experience one or more of these situations at the subnational level and must tailor their approach to the local context. For clinical care, six major interventions must be put into place immediately and then scaled up according to epidemiologic scenarios (see Table 3).
Scenario and strategic priorities
Table 1. Key recommendations based on case severity and risk factors, irrespective of transmission scenario
| Case severity, risk factors | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| Mild Moderate with no risk factors (a) | Patient should be instructed to self-isolate and contact COVID-19 information line for advice on testing and referral.
Test suspected COVID-19 cases according to diagnostic strategy. Isolation/ cohorting in:
Self-isolation at home according to WHO guidance. |
| Moderate, with risk factors Severe Critical | Patient should be instructed to self-isolate and call COVID-19 hotline for emergency referral as soon as possible.
Hospitalization for isolation (or cohorting) and inpatient treatment. Test suspect COVID-19 cases according to diagnostic strategy. |
(a) Known risk factors for severe COVID-19: age over 60 years, hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, chronic respiratory disease, immunocompromising conditions. Note: Probable cases should be retested immediately.
Table 2
| Scenario | Priorities |
|---|---|
| No cases |
|
| Sporadic cases |
|
| Clusters of cases |
|
| Community transmission |
|
= Immediate public health interventions
Table 3 Summary of immediate public health interventions, irrespective of transmission scenario
| Community messaging | Messages should include the following:
|
|---|---|
| Health facility readiness |
|
| Health staff readiness |
|
| Referral system readiness8 | # Communicate the details of COVID-19 designated facilities to all command and dispatch centres for appropriate destination triage.
|
| Designate COVID-19 treatment areas within health facilities |
|
| Establish COVID-19 surge plan. | Plan for repurposing of wards for severely or critically ill patients. 2. Plan for community facilities for isolation of mild or moderate patients or for self-isolation at home. 3. Re-evaluate COVID-19 discharge criteria and disposition during recovery period. |
| Maintain essential health services | Establish simplified, purpose-designed, governance, and coordination mechanisms to complement response protocols. The impact of repurposing health system capacities for COVID-19 care should be evaluated on a regular basis. 2. Ensure context-relevant core health services and business continuity are not compromised. 3. Optimize or modify service delivery platforms as per context-relevant core health services. 4. Redistribute health workforce capacity as needed. 4. Develop a consultative and collaborative mechanism to establish non-urgent care priorities. |
References
- ↑ Wu Z, McGoogan JM. Characteristics of and Important Lessons From the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Outbreak in China: Summary of a Report of 72 314 Cases From the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. JAMA. 2020. doi: 10.1001/jama.2020.2648. [Epub ahead of print]
- ↑ Ministero della Salute. Nuovo coronavirus: Cosa c’è da sapere. http://www.salute.gov.it/portale/documentazione/p6_2_8.jsp?lingua=italiano (accessed 18 March 2020).
- ↑ World Health Organization. Critical preparedness, readiness and response actions for COVID-19.
- ↑ ref 4