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Adapting for the COVID-19 pandemic in Ecuador, a characterization of hospital strategies and patients

Daniel Garzón-Chávez, Daniel Romero-Álvarez, Marco Bonifaz, Juan G. Gaviria, Daniel Mero, Narcisa Gunsha, Asiris Perez, María Garcia, Hugo Cárdenas, Franklin Espinosa, Edison Ligña, Mauricio Espinel, Emmanuelle Quentin, Enrique Terán, Francisco Mora, Jorge Reyes

2021PLoS ONE14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) a global pandemic on 11 March 2020. In Ecuador, the first case of COVID-19 was recorded on 29 February 2020. Despite efforts to control its spread, SARS-CoV-2 overran the Ecuadorian public health system, which became one of the most affected in Latin America on 24 April 2020. The Hospital General del Sur de Quito (HGSQ) had to transition from a general to a specific COVID-19 health center in a short period of time to fulfill the health demand from patients with respiratory afflictions. Here, we summarized the implementations applied in the HGSQ to become a COVID-19 exclusive hospital, including the rearrangement of hospital rooms and a triage strategy based on a severity score calculated through an artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted chest computed tomography (CT). Moreover, we present clinical, epidemiological, and laboratory data from 75 laboratory tested COVID-19 patients, which represent the first outbreak of Quito city. The majority of patients were male with a median age of 50 years. We found differences in laboratory parameters between intensive care unit (ICU) and non-ICU cases considering C-reactive protein, lactate dehydrogenase, and lymphocytes. Sensitivity and specificity of the AI-assisted chest CT were 21.4% and 66.7%, respectively, when considering a score >70%; regardless, this system became a cornerstone of hospital triage due to the lack of RT-PCR testing and timely results. If health workers act as vectors of SARS-CoV-2 at their domiciles, they can seed outbreaks that might put 1,879,047 people at risk of infection within 15 km around the hospital. Despite our limited sample size, the information presented can be used as a local example that might aid future responses in low and middle-income countries facing respiratory transmitted epidemics.

Topics & Concepts

TriagePandemicMedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)EpidemiologyOutbreakPublic healthIntensive care unitHealth careEmergency medicineMedical emergencyPediatricsDiseaseIntensive care medicineInternal medicineVirologyPathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)EconomicsEconomic growthCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesCOVID-19 diagnosis using AICOVID-19 and healthcare impacts
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