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The Influence of the COVID-19 Pandemic on ICU Organization, Care Processes, and Frontline Clinician Experiences

Authors :
Abhijit Duggal
Kusum S. Mathews
Sara E. Golden
Thomas S. Valley
Shannon M. Nugent
Kevin P. Seitz
Amanda Schutz
Catherine L. Hough
Christopher G. Slatore
Kelly C. Vranas
Steven Y. Chang
Donald R. Sullivan
Source :
Chest. 160:1714-1728
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in unprecedented adjustments to ICU organization and care processes globally. Research Questions Did hospital emergency responses to the COVID-19 pandemic differ depending on hospital setting? Which strategies worked well to mitigate strain as perceived by intensivists? Study Design and Methods Between August and November 2020, we carried out semistructured interviews of intensivists from tertiary and community hospitals across six regions in the United States that experienced early or large surges of COVID-19 patients, or both. We identified themes of hospital emergency responses using the four S framework of acute surge planning: space, staff, stuff, system. Results Thirty-three intensivists from seven tertiary and six community hospitals participated. Clinicians across both settings believed that canceling elective surgeries was helpful to increase ICU capabilities and that hospitals should establish clearly defined thresholds at which surgeries are limited during future surge events. ICU staff was the most limited resource; staff shortages were improved by the use of tiered staffing models, just-in-time training for non-ICU clinicians, designated treatment teams, and deployment of trainees. Personal protective equipment (PPE) shortages and reuse were widespread, causing substantial distress among clinicians; hands-on PPE training was helpful to reduce clinicians’ anxiety. Transparency and involvement of frontline clinicians as stakeholders were important components of effective emergency responses and helped to maintain trust among staff. Interpretation We identified several strategies potentially to mitigate strain as perceived by intensivists working in both tertiary and community hospital settings. Our study also demonstrated the importance of trust and transparency between frontline staff and hospital leadership as key components of effective emergency responses during public health crises.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
160
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9ba42498cf4ff25005b24b379784677e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2021.05.041