Litcius/Paper detail

Providing essential clinical care for non-COVID-19 patients in a Seoul metropolitan acute care hospital amidst ongoing treatment of COVID-19 patients

K.D. Lee, Seungbok Lee, Jaegyun Lim, Yu Mi Kang, Inseo Kim, H.J. Moon, Woo Jung Lee

2020Journal of Hospital Infection23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We assessed infection control efforts by comparing data collected over 20 weeks during a pandemic under a dual-track healthcare system. A decline in non-COVID-19 patients visiting the emergency department by 37.6% (P<0.01) was observed since admitting COVID-19 cases. However, patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stroke, severe trauma and acute appendicitis presenting for emergency care did not decrease. Door-to-balloon time (34.3 (± 11.3) min vs 22.7 (± 8.3) min) for AMI improved significantly (P<0.01) while door-to-needle time (55.7 (± 23.9) min vs 54.0 (± 18.0) min) in stroke management remained steady (P=0.80). Simultaneously, time-sensitive care involving other clinical services, including patients requiring chemotherapy, radiation therapy and haemodialysis did not change.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PandemicEmergency medicineEmergency departmentMyocardial infarctionStroke (engine)Acute strokeAcute careHealth careIntensive care medicineInternal medicineDiseaseNursingMechanical engineeringEconomicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)EngineeringEconomic growthCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsDisaster Response and ManagementEmergency and Acute Care Studies
Providing essential clinical care for non-COVID-19 patients in a Seoul metropolitan acute care hospital amidst ongoing treatment of COVID-19 patients | Litcius