ECMO physicians outline guidance to treat critically ill COVID-19 patients
Rapidly escalating numbers of COVID-19 patients suffering from respiratory failure threaten to overwhelm hospital capacity and force healthcare providers into making challenging decisions about the care they provide. Of particular interest is the role of ECMO - extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, a form of life support for patients with advanced lung disease - to support critically ill patients in the current pandemic.
In "ECMO Resource Planning in the Setting of a Pandemic Respiratory Illness," an open-access paper published in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society, ECMO physicians outline their approach for care.
Currently, there is no vaccine or treatment for COVID-19 beyond supportive care such as mechanical ventilation or, in severe cases, ECMO to maintain patients and provide a window for potential recovery. However, when demand far outpaces a hospital's ability to provide highly specialized, resource-intensive therapies such as ECMO, physicians must be prepared to determine when and if to offer such support.
Dr. Keller and his co-author suggest the following guidelines to help medical centers respond to patients' needs as resources contract in the COVID-19 pandemic:
Mild Surge - Focus on increasing capacity:
- Develop criteria specific to pandemic for initiation and cessation of ECMO.
- Obtain necessary equipment and expand capacity.
- Collocate/regionalize ECMO patients.
- Complement staffing protocols that allow for ECMO specialists/RNs to care for more patients based on acuity
- Collaborate with other local/regional ECMO centers.
Moderate Surge - Transition focus to determine allocation of scarce resources
Major Surge - Limit or defer use of scarce resources.
"Planning for how to deploy these resources in advance will both optimize care for patients initiated on ECMO support as well as provide guidance for clinicians caring for patients in whom ECMO support is not an option in a resource-limited environment," said Dr. Keller.
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