1. A Novel Cohorting and Isolation Strategy for Suspected COVID-19 Cases during a Pandemic
- Author
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Sarah Logan, Akish Luintel, Gemma Martinez-Garcia, Tom Parks, Michael Brown, Benjamin Patterson, Philip Gothard, Michael Marks, Gabriella Bidwell, Karen Shaw, Neil Stone, Dalia Ludwig, and Rik Thomas
- Subjects
Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Isolation (health care) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Psychological intervention ,Guidelines as Topic ,Disease ,030501 epidemiology ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Betacoronavirus ,03 medical and health sciences ,London ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,Infection control ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cross Infection ,0303 health sciences ,SARS-CoV-2 ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Triage ,Infectious Diseases ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Coronavirus Infections ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic presents a significant infection prevention and control challenge. The admission of large numbers of patients with suspected COVID-19 disease risks overwhelming the capacity to protect other patients from exposure. The delay between clinical suspicion and confirmatory testing adds to the complexity of the problem. METHODS: We implemented a triage tool aimed at minimizing hospital-acquired COVID-19 particularly in patients at risk of severe disease. Patients were allocated to triage categories defined by likelihood of COVID-19 and risk of a poor outcome. Category A (low-likelihood; high-risk), B (high-likelihood; high-risk), C (high-likelihood; low-risk) and D (low-likelihood; low-risk). This determined the order of priority for isolation in single-occupancy rooms with Category A the highest. Patients in other groups were cohorted when isolation capacity was limited with additional interventions to reduce transmission. RESULTS: Ninety-three patients were evaluated with 79 (85%) receiving a COVID-19 diagnosis during their admission. Of those without a COVID-19 diagnosis: 10 were initially triaged to Category A; 0 to B; 1 to C and 4 to D. All high-risk patients requiring isolation were, therefore, admitted to single-occupancy rooms and protected from exposure. Twenty-eight (30%) suspected COVID-19 patients were evaluated to be low risk (groups C and D) and eligible for cohorting. No symptomatic hospital-acquired infections were detected in the cohorted patients. DISCUSSION: Application of a clinical triage tool to guide isolation and cohorting decisions may reduce the risk of hospital-acquired transmission of COVID-19 especially to individuals at the greatest of risk of severe disease.
- Published
- 2020
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