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Safety of 'hot' and 'cold' site admissions within a high‐volume urology department in the United Kingdom at the peak of the COVID‐19 pandemic

Authors :
Sharon Clovis
Li June Tay
Luke Stroman
Bethany Jackson
Rajesh Nair
Muhammad Shamim Khan
Findlay MacAskill
Christian Brown
Leslie Cooper
Raveen Sandher
Cassandra McDonald
Anna Walsh
Rick Popert
Prokar Dasgupta
Katherine Guest
Jane Cossins
Thomasia Azavedo
Tet Yap
Luis Felipe Ribeiro
Elizabeth Eversden
Claire Taylor
Yamini Kailash
Susan Willis
J. Glass
Rhana Zakri
Benjamin Challacombe
Majed Shabbir
Catherine Roberts
Harold Omana
Jeffrey Ritualo
Beth Russell
Pinky Kotecha
Meghana Kulkarni
Tim O'Brien
Ella Doerge
Oussama El Hage
Louisa Fleure
Archana Fernando
Francesca Kum
Anastasia Kantartzi
Liza Mills
Matthew Bultitude
Adeoye Oluwakanyinsola Debo-Aina
Paul Cathcart
Ramesh Thurairaja
Kay Thomas
Marios Hadjipavlou
Amelia Barber
Lily Studd
Grace Zisengwe
Vugar Ismaylov
Nick Simson
Elsie Mensah
Ella Di Benedetto
Jonathon Olsburgh
Jonah Rusere
Arun Sahai
Ramandeep Chalokia
Sachin Malde
Kathryn Chatterton
Source :
BJUI Compass, Vol 2, Iss 2, Pp 97-104 (2021), Bjui Compass, BJUI Compass
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Objectives To determine the safety of urological admissions and procedures during the height of the COVID‐19 pandemic using “hot” and “cold” sites. The secondary objective is to determine risk factors of contracting COVID‐19 within our cohort. Patients and methods A retrospective cohort study of all consecutive patients admitted from March 1 to May 31, 2020 at a high‐volume tertiary urology department in London, United Kingdom. Elective surgery was carried out at a “cold” site requiring a negative COVID‐19 swab 72‐hours prior to admission and patients were required to self‐isolate for 14‐days preoperatively, while all acute admissions were admitted to the “hot” site. Complications related to COVID‐19 were presented as percentages. Risk factors for developing COVID‐19 infection were determined using multivariate logistic regression analysis. Results A total of 611 patients, 451 (73.8%) male and 160 (26.2%) female, with a median age of 57 (interquartile range 44‐70) were admitted under the urology team; 101 (16.5%) on the “cold” site and 510 (83.5%) on the “hot” site. Procedures were performed in 495 patients of which eight (1.6%) contracted COVID‐19 postoperatively with one (0.2%) postoperative mortality due to COVID‐19. Overall, COVID‐19 was detected in 20 (3.3%) patients with two (0.3%) deaths. Length of stay was associated with contracting COVID‐19 in our cohort (OR 1.25, 95% CI 1.13‐1.39). Conclusions Continuation of urological procedures using “hot” and “cold” sites throughout the COVID‐19 pandemic was safe practice, although the risk of COVID‐19 remained and is underlined by a postoperative mortality.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26884526
Volume :
2
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BJUI Compass
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....57e31cf96ea89422f247d0c9bf618c8e