The respiratory syndrome COVID-19 has had a devastating effect on health, economy, and social life worldwide. The healthcare system of industrialised countries has been at times submerged by the pandemic, leading to some of the most challenging choices in health resource distribution experienced by this generation. During local COVID-19 prevalence surges, access to operating theatres and intensive care facilities for all but the most urgent surgery has been severely restricted. The workforce and intensive care have been redeployed to deal with the flood of COVID-19 cases. Associated with this limited access to elective theatre, disease specific case prioritisation has been required. Society and healthcare providers tend to be very aware of the need to perform early surgery for cancer diagnoses, and the associated high morbidity and mortality of vascular patients is less well recognised. The high mortality of vascular patients infected with COVID-19 and particularly the risk of pulmonary complications was not widely understood at the start of the pandemic; moreover, there was a high geographical variability in the severity of the COVID-19 distribution, and a standardisation of the hospital strategies was not possible.1, 2, 3, 4

Maintaining Safe Elective Aneurysm Surgery in the COVID-19 Era

Faggioli G.;
2021

Abstract

The respiratory syndrome COVID-19 has had a devastating effect on health, economy, and social life worldwide. The healthcare system of industrialised countries has been at times submerged by the pandemic, leading to some of the most challenging choices in health resource distribution experienced by this generation. During local COVID-19 prevalence surges, access to operating theatres and intensive care facilities for all but the most urgent surgery has been severely restricted. The workforce and intensive care have been redeployed to deal with the flood of COVID-19 cases. Associated with this limited access to elective theatre, disease specific case prioritisation has been required. Society and healthcare providers tend to be very aware of the need to perform early surgery for cancer diagnoses, and the associated high morbidity and mortality of vascular patients is less well recognised. The high mortality of vascular patients infected with COVID-19 and particularly the risk of pulmonary complications was not widely understood at the start of the pandemic; moreover, there was a high geographical variability in the severity of the COVID-19 distribution, and a standardisation of the hospital strategies was not possible.1, 2, 3, 4
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/872833
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