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Mitigation of head and neck cancer service disruption during COVID-19 in Hong Kong through telehealth and multi-institutional collaboration.

Alex K F LeeRyan H W ChoEric H L LauHung K ChengEddy W Y WongPeter K M KuJason Ying-Kuen ChanZenon W C Yeung
Published in: Head & neck (2020)
The 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has been spreading worldwide at an alarming rate. Health-care workers have been confronted with the challenge of not only treating patients with the virus, but also managing the disruption of health-care services caused by COVID-19. In anticipation of outbreak, clinic sessions and operation theater lists have been actively cut back since February 2020 to reduce hospital admissions and clinic attendances. This has severely disrupted health-care services, leading to accumulating clinic caseload and substantial delays for operations. The head and neck cancer service has been faced with the difficult task of managing the balance between infection risk to health-care providers and the risk of disease progression from prolonged waiting times. We share our experience in Hong Kong on the mitigation of head and neck cancer service disruption through telehealth and multi-institution collaboration.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • coronavirus disease
  • primary care
  • climate change
  • mental health
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • resting state
  • social media