1. Remodelling intravitreal therapy pathways for macular disease during the COVID-19 pandemic and an Austrian national lockdown
- Author
-
C. Hirn, Josef Huemer, Oliver Findl, Julius Hienert, Christoph Hackl, and Stephan Radda
- Subjects
retina ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,degeneration ,Disease ,neovascularisation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,lcsh:Ophthalmology ,Pandemic ,medicine ,macula ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Original Research ,Health professionals ,business.industry ,Mean age ,Macular disease ,Retrospective cohort study ,Ophthalmology ,Treatment Refusal ,lcsh:RE1-994 ,Emergency medicine ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,business - Abstract
ObjectiveTo analyse the remodelling and recovery of a relocated intravitreal injection (IVI) service with an adapted treatment regimen in a tertiary referral centre during a nationwide lockdown with initial cancellation of all non-emergency treatments caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.Methods and analysisFor this retrospective observational study at Hanusch Hospital, Vienna, between 16 March 2020 and 5 May 2020, we conducted an analysis of an appointment booking system based on prioritisation incorporating disease class, severity and fellow eye status by evidence-based impact on irreversible structural impairment and survey data from telephone interviews. Recapture time was defined as the time-to-discard the backlog of patients in need for treatment. Non-attendance was stratified as treatment refusal for personal reasons and non-attendance due to lockdown-related restrictions.ResultsOf the 1109 patients, 241 (21.7%) were considered as highly urgent, 269 (24.3%) as urgent, 402 (36.2%) as semiurgent and 197 (17.8%) as non-urgent. Recapture time was 15 days for highly urgent patients, 22 days for urgent patients, 43 days for semiurgent patients and 46 days for non-urgent patients. The proportion of patients who refused treatment due to personal reasons was 5.2%, with a mean age of 82.4 years; 29 patients (2.6%) could not attend due to lockdown-related restrictions.ConclusionBy streamlining treatment based on urgency as well as increasing the number of bilateral IVI, recapture time was fast. We could provide a safe treatment environment for healthcare professionals and patients after resetting the injection service outside of the hospital with increased levels of protection.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF