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The Aftermath of COVID-19 Lockdown- Why and How Should We Be Ready?

Authors :
P. Sarat Chandra
Manjul Tripathi
Harsh Deora
Ninad R Patil
Suresh Bada Math
Kiran Jangra
Dhaval Shukla
Nidhi Panda
Hemant Bhagat
Sanjay Behari
Lokendra Singh
Aman Batish
Ashish Aggarwal
Sunil Gupta
Nishanth Sadashiva
Nishant S. Yagnick
Sandeep Mohindra
Manas Panigrahi
Source :
Neurology India. 68(4)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Introduction: Severe acute respiratory syndrome, coronavirus 2 (SARS-COV 2) has inexplicably and irreversibly changed the way of neurosurgery practice. There has been a substantial reduction in neurosurgical operations during the period of lockdown. The lockdown might be the most effective measure to curtail viral transmission. Once we return to the normalization of the lifestyle, there will be a backlog of unoperated pending cases along with the possibility of further spread of the coronavirus. Methods: We reviewed the available literature and protocols for neurosurgical practice in different geographic locations. We drafted a consensus statement based on the literature and protocols suggested by the World Health Organization (WHO) and various professional societies to prevent the spread of SARS-COV2 while streamlining the neurosurgical practice. Results: The consensus statement suggests the patient triage, workflow, resource distribution, and operational efficacy for care providers at different stages of management. The priority is set at personal protection while ensuring patients' safety, timely management, and capacity building. We performed a detailed subsection analysis for the management of trauma and set up for COVID-free hospitals for simultaneous management of routine neurosurgical indications. In this time of medicolegal upheaval, special consent from the patients should be taken in view of the chances of delay in management and the added risk of corona infection. The consensus statements are applicable to neurosurgical setups of all capacities. Conclusion: Along with the glaring problem of infection, there is another threat of neurosurgery emergency building up. This wave may overwhelm the already stretched systems to the hilt. We need to flatten this curve while avoiding contagion. These measures may guide neurosurgery practitioners to effectively manage patients ensuring the safety of caregivers and care seekers both.

Details

ISSN :
19984022
Volume :
68
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology India
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d21e10839dea11a5093fbff494412e4c