AI Article Synopsis

  • - Traditional practices for early tracheostomy in critically ill patients need to be reevaluated due to the heightened risks of COVID-19 for both patients and healthcare workers, prompting the development of revised safety guidelines.
  • - This narrative review draws on the experience of over 120 patients with tracheostomy, analyzing current evidence to establish safer procedures, particularly aimed at reducing aerosol transmission risks during care.
  • - The study emphasizes the importance of a multidisciplinary approach in tracheostomy care, advocating for improved infection control strategies and individualized protocols to ensure the safety of both patients and medical staff during the pandemic.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Traditional critical care dogma regarding the benefits of early tracheostomy during invasive ventilation has had to be revisited due to the risk of COVID-19 to patients and healthcare staff. Standard practises that have evolved to minimise the risks associated with tracheostomy must be comprehensively reviewed in light of the numerous potential episodes for aerosol generating procedures. We meet the urgent need for safe practise standards by presenting the experience of two major London teaching hospitals, and synthesise our findings into an evidence-based guideline for multidisciplinary care of the tracheostomy patient.

Methods: This is a narrative review presenting the extensive experience of over 120 patients with tracheostomy, with a pragmatic analysis of currently available evidence for safe tracheostomy care in COVID-19 patients.

Results: Tracheostomy care involves many potentially aerosol generating procedures which may pose a risk of viral transmission to staff and patients. We make a series of recommendations to ameliorate this risk through infection control strategies, equipment modification, and individualised decannulation protocols. In addition, we discuss the multidisciplinary collaboration that is absolutely fundamental to safe and effective practise.

Conclusion: COVID-19 requires a radical rethink of many tenets of tracheostomy care, and controversy continues to exist regarding the optimal techniques to minimise risk to patients and healthcare workers. Safe practise requires a coordinated multidisciplinary team approach to infection control, weaning and decannulation, with integrated processes for continuous prospective data collection and audit.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7299456PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00405-020-06126-0DOI Listing

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