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Inicio Revista Española de Anestesiología y Reanimación (English Edition) Experience of a pediatric monographic hospital and strategies adopted for periop...
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Vol. 67. Núm. 9.
Páginas 527-528 (noviembre 2020)
Vol. 67. Núm. 9.
Páginas 527-528 (noviembre 2020)
Letter to the Director
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Experience of a pediatric monographic hospital and strategies adopted for perioperative care during the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic and the reorganization of urgent pediatric care in the Community of Madrid, Spain
Experiencia de un hospital monográfico pediátrico y estrategias adoptadas para los cuidados perioperatorios durante la epidemia por SARS-CoV-2 y la reorganización de la atención pediátrica urgente en la Comunidad de Madrid. España
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E. Martínez García
Autor para correspondencia
ernesmg2002@yahoo.es

Corresponding author.
, P. del Rey de Diego, C. Tormo de las Heras, P. Catalán Escudero
Servicio de Anestesia y Reanimación, HIU Niño Jesús, Madrid, Spain
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Table 1. Measures taken in the Surgical Block of the HIU Niño Jesús in response to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic and the reorganization of urgent paediatric care in the Community of Madrid.
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To the Editor,

COVID-19 is a highly contagious disease and a considerable burden for the health system both in terms of controlling the infection itself and treating other diseases. Spain, and specifically the Autonomous Community of Madrid, has experienced one of the highest rates of infection worldwide (up to 900 cases per 100,000 inhabitants).1 On 20 March 2020, the Ministry of Health of the Community of Madrid reorganized the paediatric emergency, intensive care, and hospitalization system by centralizing the care of the region’s 1,350,000 children ranging in age 0 to 18 years2 in the La Paz University Hospital and the Niño Jesús University Children’s Hospital.3 As we have seen, COVID-19 is an example of how emerging viral pandemics “can place extraordinary and sustained demands on public health and health systems and on providers of essential community services”. Such demands will create the need to ration medical equipment and interventions.4 One of the first measures to be taken, therefore, is to devise a strategy for managing resource shortages.5

  • o

    Preparation: anticipate challenges, develop plans, stockpile materials.

  • o

    Conservation: implement conservation strategies for existing, or foreseen, supply shortages to minimise the impact as far as possible (for example, determine “at risk” groups with priority to receive therapies in short supply, and implement general strategies to conserve the use of oxygen delivery devices or personal protective equipment).

  • o

    Substitution: provide an equivalent or nearly equivalent drug or delivery device.

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    Adaptation: use equipment for other purposes (e.g. anaesthesia machine as a respirator).

  • o

    Reuse: plan for the reuse of a wide variety of materials after proper disinfection or sterilization (may include oxygen delivery devices, for example).

  • o

    Reallocation: if there are no alternatives, remove a resource from one area/patient and assign it to another with a higher probability of benefit (e.g. triage).

The characteristics of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, its mode of transmission, and clinical repercussions have compelled clinicians to apply these measures to both diagnostic (polymerase chain reaction testing with real-time reverse transcriptase; rRT-PCR, and serology) and therapeutic (drugs, respiratory support systems, hospital beds, critical care beds) resources, and individual protective equipment for healthcare personnel. The need to optimise resources is evident in all protocols (emergency care, hospital care, intensive care) including, of course, perioperative care protocols. All these protocols, given the recent emergence of the disease, need to be continuously developed, revised and updated. In the case of the Hospital Infantil Universitario Niño Jesús in Madrid, both the health alert following the outbreak of the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic and the reorganization of urgent paediatric care in the Community of Madrid, which doubled the number of daily surgical emergencies (compared to the same period in March and April 2018 and 2019), forced the hospital to phase in a series of measures based on current recommendations (Table 1). Data collection and analysis was also carried out on children undergoing any procedure in the operating room under general anaesthesia between 16 March and 26 April 2020. According to the Microbiology Service, during this period 5% of rRT-PCRs for SARS-CoV-2 performed in the hospital were positive. Of the 186 urgent procedures performed in the operating room during this period, a total of 144 underwent rRT-CRP testing, which was positive in 3 cases (2%). All patients made good progress. In addition, 2 other prioritised procedures were postponed due to positive rRT-CRP results. In the case of paediatric patient therefore, despite the reorganization of health emergencies, COVID-19 has not overburdened the capacity of the healthcare system. For example, we have fortunately not needed to develop protocols for adapting the level of care in accordance with ethical considerations and the recommendations drawn up by scientific societies, as has been the case in adult patients. Although direct morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 is low in the paediatric population, the indirect impact of health system saturation on the care of urgent and non-urgent cases and chronically ill patients has yet to be determined. Finally, we must not forget the possible effects on health personnel exposed to infection and extreme professional and working conditions.

Table 1.

Measures taken in the Surgical Block of the HIU Niño Jesús in response to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic and the reorganization of urgent paediatric care in the Community of Madrid.

Recommendations  Person responsible  Measures taken 
Planning: estimate the hospital’s response capacity and coordinate with the rest of the network  Medical Director, Head of Continuity of Care  Daily meeting of the management team and heads of service 
Bed management: increase availability of critical beds, reorganize emergency services  Medical Director, heads of Surgical, Emergency, Paediatrics, Intensive Care, and Anaesthesia services  Suspend scheduled non-urgent or prioritised surgical activityReorganise urgent paediatric care in the Community of Madrid 
Material resources: increased availability  Management  Strategies for resource shortages 
Human Resources: work overload, multidisciplinary alliances, alternative organizational models  Medical Director, Head of Nursing, Heads of Surgical, Anaesthesia, Paediatric and Intensive Care services, Operating Room and Intensive Care Nursing supervisor  Optimise and adapt human resources as the pandemic evolves 
Inefficiency of vertical solutions  Horizontal collaboration networks  Protection of healthcare personnelGeneral surgical block measurementsPerioperative management of paediatric patients 
Demand exceeds supply: resources for patients who will benefit the most  Healthcare Ethics Committee  Ethical framework 
Data: collection and analysis to define the problem and adapt the response  Medical Director, heads of Surgical, Emergency, Paediatrics, Intensive Care, and Anaesthesia services  Anaesthesia Service Database 

The accumulated experience should help us maintain the measures for the perioperative management of COVID-19 patients, and to develop the concept of transversal and horizontal perioperative patient care: coordination and collaboration between the governing bodies and the medical, surgical and nursing personnel involved. Many have said that this pandemic has changed our lives, and without a doubt it will also change medical practice.

References
[1]
Situación de COVID-19 en España. Basada en la notificación diaria de casos agregados de COVID-19 al Ministerio de Sanidad. Available from: https://covid19.isciii.es/. [Accessed 25 April 2020].
[2]
Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Padrón anual. Resultados definitivos. Available from: http://www.madrid.org/iestadis/fijas/estructu/demograficas/padron/estructupopc.htm. [Accessed 20 March 2020].
[3]
La Consejería de Sanidad de la Comunidad de Madrid reorganiza la atención de la pediátrica urgente. Available from: https://www.comunidad.madrid/noticias/2020/03/21/comunidad-madrid-reorganiza-atencion-pediatrica-urgente. [Accessed 20 March 2020].
[4]
E.J. Emanuel, G. Persad, R. Upshur, B. Thome, M. Parker, A. Glickman, et al.
Fair allocation of scarce medical resources in the time of Covid-19.
N Engl J Med, (2020),
[5]
J.L. Hick, D. Hanfling, M.K. Wynia, A.T. Pavia.
Duty to plan: Healthcare, crisis standards of care, and novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2.
NAM Perspectives, (2020),

Please cite this article as: Martínez García E, del Rey de Diego P, Tormo de las Heras C, Catalán Escudero P. Experiencia de un hospital monográfico pediátrico y estrategias adoptadas para los cuidados perioperatorios durante la epidemia por SARS-CoV-2 y la reorganización de la atención pediátrica urgente en la Comunidad de Madrid. España. Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redar.2020.07.008

Copyright © 2020. Sociedad Española de Anestesiología, Reanimación y Terapéutica del Dolor
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