Multidisciplinary guidance for safe tracheostomy care during the COVID-19 pandemic: the NHS National Patient Safety Improvement Programme (NatPatSIP).
Brendan A McGrathN AshbyM BirchallP DeanC DohertyK FergusonJ GimblettM GrocottT JacobC KerawalaP MacnaughtonP MagennisR MoonesingheP TwoseS WallaceA HiggsPublished in: Anaesthesia (2020)
The COVID-19 pandemic is causing a significant increase in the number of patients requiring relatively prolonged invasive mechanical ventilation and an associated surge in patients who need a tracheostomy to facilitate weaning from respiratory support. In parallel, there has been a global increase in guidance from professional bodies representing staff who care for patients with tracheostomies at different points in their acute hospital journey, rehabilitation and recovery. Of concern are the risks to healthcare staff of infection arising from tracheostomy insertion and caring for patients with a tracheostomy. Hospitals are also facing extraordinary demands on critical care services such that many patients who require a tracheostomy will be managed outside established intensive care or head and neck units and cared for by staff with little tracheostomy experience. These concerns led NHS England and NHS Improvement to expedite the National Patient Safety Improvement Programme's 'Safe Tracheostomy Care' workstream as part of the NHS COVID-19 response. Supporting this workstream, UK stakeholder organisations involved in tracheostomy care were invited to develop consensus guidance based on: expert opinion; the best available published literature; and existing multidisciplinary guidelines. Topics with direct relevance for frontline staff were identified. This consensus guidance includes: infectivity of patients with respect to tracheostomy indications and timing; aerosol-generating procedures and risks to staff; insertion procedures; and management following tracheostomy.
Keyphrases
- mechanical ventilation
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- healthcare
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- intensive care unit
- respiratory failure
- palliative care
- systematic review
- clinical practice
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- long term care
- pain management
- prognostic factors
- affordable care act
- drug induced
- patient reported outcomes