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Hospital Emergency Management Plan During the COVID‐19 Epidemic

Yubin Cao, Qin Li, Jing Chen, Xia Guo, Miao Cheng, Hui Yang, Zihang Chen, Chunjie Li, Longjiang Li

2020Academic Emergency Medicine228 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The confirmed and suspected cases of the 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) have increased not only in Wuhan, Hubei Province, but also China and the world. Enormous demand for handling the COVID-19 outbreak challenged both the health care personnel and the medical supply system. In West China Hospital, emergency department (ED) undertook the mission of clinical reception, primary diagnosis, and interim treatment for the suspected cases of COVID-19. The pathogen of COVID-19, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, was confirmed to have human-to-human transmission.1 Therefore, COVID-19 has expanded the infection risk from Wuhan to cities throughout China and even the world via case transportation.2 Providing qualified personal protection equipment (PPE) to health care personnel plays an essential role in avoiding occupational exposure and infection. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for COVID-19 infection control of health care personnel recommended gloves, gowns, respiratory protection, and eye protection as standardized PPE.3 However, protective clothing, N95 respirators, and goggles are not commonly used in clinical practice and hence are not in bulk stock. This brief report aims to present our interim hospital management measures on the health care personnel protection in West China Hospital under the condition of intense workload and PPE supply shortage after the outbreak of COVID-19. Emergency- and disaster-preparedness was an important issue and a global problem. Most hospitals could not maintain their routine work for a week due to the disaster-related resource shortage.5 A previous review highlighted the challenge of the emergency ordering of standardized PPE supply.6 The hospital invested greater efforts to establish an emergency management system based on the anticipated hazard.7 However, the unpredictable epidemic rendered the interim PPE preparedness impossible, especially for less-used PPE, protective clothing, and N95 respirators in daily work. It might be more practical to prepare a flexible hospital contingency plan than abundant PPE preparedness. Our hospital adopted interim measures, including online consultation, region separation, and epidemic priority, to alleviate the pressure in the clinical work, reduce the cross-infection, and strengthen the protection of high-risk staff. Our hospital held the “zero infection” record, which was far lower than the simultaneous outside-Hubei mean level of 3.4% in late January.8 The zero infection indicated the flexibility and validity of our interim hospital management strategy. However, there were still some limitations. First, the supply protocol compromised the health protection of low-risk personnel without standardized PPE. Second, the interim management strategies could not resist large-scale outbreak and long-term PPE shortage. Nevertheless, our management strategies, as a temporary emergency plan, created the biggest benefits of extremely limited resources to meet the emergency need. The long-term solution should be a sustainable supply chain. Fortunately, the government of China recovered the PPE production supply in February, which alleviated the supply shortage significantly. In conclusion, the hospital emergency management plan of West China Hospital could alleviate the ED workload, protect health care personnel, and control the cross-infection during the COVID-19 epidemic. We advocate that every hospital should create the contingency plan suited to their conditions. We acknowledge the colleagues at Emergency Department of West China Hospital and also all the colleagues combating COVID-19.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePersonal protective equipmentInterimInfection controlPreparednessMedical emergencyHealth careOutbreakPandemicInfectious disease (medical specialty)Emergency medicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DiseaseIntensive care medicineVirologyLawEconomic growthArchaeologyHistoryPolitical scienceEconomicsPathologyCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsDisaster Response and ManagementCOVID-19 and Mental Health