A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7201228/ below:

ACR Statement on Safe Resumption of Routine Radiology Care During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Pandemic

Abstract

The ACR recognizes that radiology practices are grappling with when and how to safely resume routine radiology care during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Although it is unclear how long the pandemic will last, it may persist for many months. Throughout this time, it will be important to perform safe, comprehensive, and effective care for patients with and patients without COVID-19, recognizing that asymptomatic transmission is common with this disease. Local idiosyncrasies prevent a single prescriptive strategy. However, general considerations can be applied to most practice environments. A comprehensive strategy will include consideration of local COVID-19 statistics; availability of personal protective equipment; local, state, and federal government mandates; institutional regulatory guidance; local safety measures; health care worker availability; patient and health care worker risk factors; factors specific to the indication(s) for radiology care; and examination or procedure acuity. An accurate risk-benefit analysis of postponing versus performing a given routine radiology examination or procedure often is not possible because of many unknown and complex factors. However, this is the overriding principle: If the risk of illness or death to a health care worker or patient from health care–acquired COVID-19 is greater than the risk of illness or death from delaying radiology care, the care should be delayed; however, if the opposite is true, the radiology care should proceed in a timely fashion.

Key Words: COVID-19, Practice management, Routine, Safety

Background

The ACR recognizes that radiology practices are grappling with when and how to safely resume necessary nonurgent radiology care during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Although it is unclear how long the pandemic will last, it may persist for many months. Throughout this time, it will be important to perform safe, comprehensive, and effective care for patients with and without COVID-19, recognizing that asymptomatic transmission is common with this disease.

Local idiosyncrasies prevent a single prescriptive strategy. However, general considerations can be applied to most practice environments. A comprehensive strategy will include consideration of local COVID-19 statistics; availability of personal protective equipment (PPE); local, state, and federal government mandates; institutional regulatory guidance; local safety measures; health care worker availability; patient and health care worker risk factors; factors specific to the indication(s) for radiology care; and examination or procedure acuity.

Overriding Guiding Principle

If the risk of illness or death to a health care worker or patient from health care–acquired COVID-19 is greater than the risk of illness or death from delaying radiology care, the care should be delayed; however, if the opposite is true, the radiology care should proceed in a timely fashion.

The risk from health care–acquired COVID-19 can be made very low for most diagnostic radiology examinations and interventional radiology procedures if appropriate safety measures are in place (eg, screening, testing, infection control processes, PPE).

However, an accurate risk-benefit analysis of postponing versus performing a given nonurgent radiology examination or procedure often is not possible because of many unknown and complex factors. These include the specific outcome-based risk of COVID-19 (which considers local prevalence and transmissibility in the setting of local preventive measures) and the outcome-based risk of postponing imaging (which considers unknowns related to non-COVID-19 disease aggressiveness, comorbid conditions, and treatability).

Therefore, decision making will be guided by imperfect attempts to estimate these risks. Practices should do their best to determine the risk to health care workers and patients of developing illness or death from health care–acquired COVID-19 in their local environment, as well as the patient-specific risk of illness or death from postponing an examination or procedure, and then use that information to guide the re-engagement of nonurgent radiology care. In this determination, the probability of negative outcomes (from COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 disease) should take precedence. Patient-specific risk is best determined through collaboration between referring providers and radiologists.

The ACR recognizes that government and institutional mandates may interact with this decision making.

General Guidance for the Safe Re-Engagement of Nonurgent Clinical Work

There is no single ideal approach for the safe re-engagement of nonurgent radiology care. Practices are developing local solutions that work best for their needs. The ACR recommends that radiology leaders work closely with hospital systems, referring providers and patients to coordinate safe and effective care. The following recommendations apply to the safe re-engagement of nonurgent diagnostic and interventional radiology care during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is recognized that because of local factors it may not be possible for individual practices to adopt all of these recommendations.

Recommendations for the Safe Re-Engagement of Nonurgent Radiology Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic Financial Considerations Relevant to the Re-Engagement of Nonurgent Radiology Care

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a devastating effect on the economy and the US workforce. Health care systems are reporting massive losses due to the discontinuation of nonurgent care and the general reluctance of patients to enter the health care environment. This is relevant for health care workers, who, despite heroic work to treat this disease, are experiencing furloughs, layoffs, and pay cuts. Resuming nonurgent clinical care activities is anticipated to address some of these challenges and may affect the ability of a health care organization to provide care to future patients.

There are financial considerations directly relevant to patients. For example, some patients may be unable to get needed health care because of loss of employment and loss of health insurance. This is particularly problematic for patients who had insured care postponed to a future state in which they are no longer insured. Health care institutions should anticipate these needs, take steps to mitigate them, and remotely communicate solutions to patients before arrival.

Specific Considerations for Academic Practices

The safe integration of trainees (ie, fellows, residents, medical students, technologist students) into patient care is beyond the scope of this statement. In some environments, trainees are directly involved in patient care because of redeployment needs. In other environments, radiology trainees have been socially distanced into their home environment and are learning remotely. The ACR recommends that ACGME guidance [1] be followed for the safe involvement of trainees in patient care during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The safe resumption of research is beyond the scope of this statement. In general, research subjects for imaging trials should be considered the most vulnerable of our patients because their personal benefit may be low or nonexistent. Therefore, these subjects should be considered our most protected patients. However, patients requiring imaging while enrolled in investigational therapeutic trials may need to be prioritized based on clinical need similar to a patient not on a research protocol.

Take-Home Points Footnotes

The authors state that they have no conflict of interest related to the material discussed in this article.

Appendix A: Supplementary Checklist of Questions

As practices consider when and how to re-engage routine clinical care, answers to the following questions can help guide local decision-making regarding competing risks. Answers to these questions will vary by site because of local and site-specific information. As COVID-19 testing becomes more widely available, the relevance of some questions may change. The questions are organized into two major categories: how to estimate the risk from COVID-19 and how to estimate the risk from postponement. In this determination, the probability of illness or death (from COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 disease) should take precedence.

Factors to consider when weighing the risk from COVID-19 with the risk from postponement

Estimating the risk from health care acquired COVID-19:

Estimating the risk from imaging delay:

Appendix B: Statement writing group Writing group

Matthew S Davenport MD (writing group chair, Michigan Medicine), Michael A Bruno MD (Penn State), Ramesh S Iyer MD MBA (Seattle Children’s Hospital), Amirh M Johnson MS (Kaiser Permanente), Ramses Herrera MS (University of Miami), Gregory N Nicola MD (Hackensack Radiology Group), Daniel Ortiz MD (Summit Radiology Services, P.C., Georgia), Ivan Pedrosa MD PhD (University of Texas Southwestern), Bruno Policeni MBA MD (University of Iowa), Michael P Recht MD (New York University), Marc Willis DO MMM (Stanford University), Margarita L Zuley MD (University of Pittsburgh), Stefanie Weinstein MD (University of California - San Francisco)

Process

Dr. Jacqueline Bello, Chair of the ACR Commission on Quality and Safety, was charged with assembling a representative group to author a statement on the safe re-engagement of routine radiology care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Potential writing group members were identified by specialty from Appropriateness Criteria panels and Medical Physics committees. Additional members were selected for diversity in practice setting and geographic location within the United States, with an emphasis on locations most affected by COVID-19. The recruitment effort targeted members involved in leadership roles (e.g., chairs, vice chairs), and those having participated in compiling statements or webinars on similar or related topics. The writing group was intentionally targeted to 13 members to enable efficient operation while maintaining diverse perspectives by age, gender, practice location, practice type, and specialty.

An initial draft of the statement—including background information, a guiding principle, and questions for consideration—was created by the writing group chair. The draft was circulated to the writing group in advance of a teleconference. Ten of thirteen members of the writing group participated in the teleconference. Ideas were shared and discussed, and notes were taken. A revised version of the draft incorporating comments from the teleconference was created and edited by two members of the writing group, and circulated to all members. Iterative edits by all members followed. Nine sequential drafts were created. All writing group members approved the final statement.

Reference

RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.3