Here are the stories our MDedge editors across specialties think you need to know about today:
A ‘Fraternity of People Who Are Struggling’
Kathleen Ronan spent a week in a New Jersey hospital, including 5 days in the ICU, battling the novel coronavirus.
Her years of working as a home health nurse told her that the return home wouldn’t be easy, but nothing prepared her for just how much she would struggle. The once-active Ronan, 51, now needed a walker to traverse the few steps from her bed to the toilet, an effort that left her gasping for air. Her brain couldn’t even focus on an audiobook, let alone a short magazine article. “It just completely knocked the stuffing out of me,” Ronan said.
Ronan’s lingering symptoms aren’t unique to COVID-19 patients. In as many as 80% of patients leaving the ICU, researchers have documented what they call post–intensive care syndrome (PICS) — a constellation of physical, cognitive, and psychiatric symptoms that result from an ICU stay. Although underlying illness plays a role in these symptoms, the amount of time spent in critical care is a major factor.
The good news is that over the past decade, researchers have made important strides in understanding what makes PICS symptoms worse and how critical care physicians can tweak ICU protocols to reduce PICS severity. Practitioners will need to draw on this knowledge to help Ronan and the thousands of COVID-19 ICU patients like her. Read more.
The evolution of ‘COVIDists’
At the start of the pandemic earlier this year hospitalists at Baystate Health in Western Massachusetts realized the necessity of a new model of care for COVID-19 patients. Challenges included a massive surge of COVID-19 patients, a limited supply of PPE, an inadequate number of intensivists for managing the anticipated ventilated patients, and the potential of losing some of our workforce if they became infected. Hospitalists there came up with an elaborate plan to manage the disease burden and the strain on resources effectively.
A focused group of 10 hospitalists who volunteered to take care of COVID-19 patients with a particular interest in the pandemic and experience in critical care were selected, and the term “COVIDists” was coined to refer to them. The group underwent rapid training in various treatment protocols and ongoing clinical trials.
All the hospitalized COVID-19 patients were grouped together to COVID units, and the COVIDists were deployed to those units geographically. COVIDists were given lighter than usual patient loads to deal with the extra time needed for donning and doffing of PPE and for coordination with specialists. COVIDists were almost the only clinicians physically visiting the patients in most cases, and they became the “eyes and ears” of specialists since the specialists were advised to minimize exposure and pursue telemedicine consults. Read more.