1. Tracheostomy Outcomes in COVID-19 Patients in a Low Resource Setting.
- Author
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Tang, Liyang, Kim, Celeste, Paik, Connie, West, Jonathan, Hasday, Steven, Su, Peiyi, Martinez, Eduardo, Zhou, Sheng, Clark, Bhavishya, O'Dell, Karla, and Chambers, Tamara N.
- Subjects
PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,TRACHEOTOMY ,CAUSES of death ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,COVID-19 ,HISPANIC Americans ,SURGICAL complications ,DISEASES ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SAFETY-net health care providers ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BODY mass index ,PATIENT-professional relations ,PATIENT safety ,HEMORRHAGE - Abstract
Objectives: COVID-19 predominately affects safety net hospitals. Tracheostomies improve outcomes and decrease length of stay for COVID-19 patients. Our objectives are to determine if (1) COVID-19 tracheostomies have similar complication and mortality rates as non-COVID-19 tracheostomies and (2) to determine the effectiveness of our tracheostomy protocol at a safety net hospital. Methods: Patients who underwent tracheostomy at Los Angeles County Hospital between August 2009 and August 2020 were included. Demographics, SARS-CoV-2 status, body mass index (BMI), Charlson Co-morbidity Index (CCI), length of intubation, complication rates, decannulation rates, and 30-day all-cause mortality versus tracheostomy related mortality rates were all collected. Results: Thirty-eight patients with COVID-19 and 130 non-COVID-19 patients underwent tracheostomies. Both groups were predominately male with similar BMI and CCI, though the COVID-19 patients were more likely to be Hispanic and intubated for a longer time (P =.034 and P <.0001, respectively). Both groups also had similar, low intraoperative complications at 2% to 3% and comparable long-term post-operative complications. However, COVID-19 patients had more perioperative complications within 7 days of surgery (P <.01). Specifically, they were more likely to have perioperative bleeding at their tracheostomy sites (P =.03) and long-term post-operative mucus plugging (P <.01). However, both groups had similar 30-day mortality rates. There were no incidences of COVID-19 transmission to healthcare workers. Conclusions: COVID-19 tracheostomies are safe for patients and healthcare workers. Careful attention should be paid to suctioning to prevent mucus plugging. Level of Evidence: 3 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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