scholarly journals Study on Integrated Workflow Development and Presentation of Fangcang Shelter Hospitals in COVID-19 Pandemic

2020 ◽  
Vol 01 (01) ◽  
pp. 11-20
Author(s):  
Na Li ◽  
Jie Pan

Fangcang shelter hospital, which serves as hospital for isolation, treatment and disease monitoring of patients with mild symptoms, has made significant achievements in the prevention and control of COVID-19 pandemic. Meanwhile, due to the urgency and innovation of the task, managers lack clear management of the operation task flow. This paper presents some experiences learnt from the management of Fangcang shelter hospitals, which adopted the LEAN methodology to develop an integrated workflow system with clear responsibilities and process standards as a framework for performance improvement, involving nurses, patient, physicians, clerical staff, logistics staff, and other inter professional staff as well as managers and support staff.

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. e0253177
Author(s):  
Melashu Balew Shiferaw ◽  
Mulusew Alemneh Sinishaw ◽  
Desalegne Amare ◽  
Genetu Alem ◽  
Dawit Asefa ◽  
...  

Background Health care workers (HCWs) are at an increased risk of acquiring tuberculosis (TB) compared to the general population, because of the frequent face to face contact or potential exposure to TB through shared air or space with infectious patient(s), regardless of economic setting and local TB incidence. Information on the burden of active TB disease among HCWs will help guide control measures, can be utilized to evaluate the effectiveness of TB infection prevention programs in the health care setting, and guide necessary actions. However, data on TB among HCW in Ethiopia is limited. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the prevalence of active TB disease among healthcare workers and support staff in healthcare settings in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. Methods A cross-sectional study design was used to recruit a total of 580 randomly selected study participants in the Amhara region. Data were collected over four months in selected hospitals and health centers. Implementation of TB prevention and control measures was evaluated using a standardized checklist. The main outcome indicator was active TB as measured by a laboratory diagnosis using GeneXpert technology. Results A total of 580 study participants were enrolled. The mean age was 31.3 (±7.8 standard deviation) years, with about two-thirds (65.3%) aged between 18–24 years. A total of 9 (1.6%) MTB cases were detected, 4 (1.4%) in HCWs and 5 (1.7%) in support staff, which did not significantly differ (P = 0.50). About 90% of the participants had not received TB infection prevention and control training ever. More than half (54%) of the study participants worked in poorly ventilated rooms. Triage of coughing patients was not practiced in 32% of the studied facilities (health centers and hospitals). Conclusions The magnitude of TB among healthcare workers and support staff in healthcare settings was higher than in the general population (140 per 100000 population). The status of implementation of tuberculosis prevention and control measures indicated missed opportunities. Hence, strict implementation of developed infection control plans of TB in healthcare settings needs to be improved.


Author(s):  
Joseph Kawuki ◽  
Quraish Sserwanja ◽  
Nathan Obore ◽  
Johnson Wang ◽  
Joseph Lau

Abstract Objective: COVID-19 being a rapidly evolving pandemic, early lessons from the first deaths must be learnt to help feed into the public health guidelines. This study, therefore, aims to present the first two deaths due to COVID-19 in Uganda and their public health relevance.Cases: The first case was a 34-year female and support staff at a health center II. She first presented with COVID-19 like symptoms before dying on 21st July 2020. The second case was an 80 years old female, who also presented with COVID-19 like symptoms before dying on 24th July 2020. The postmortem samples of both cases were confirmed positive for COVID-19. Conclusion: This study identifies a need for timely identification and testing of COVID-19 suspects, strengthening of health center capacity, as well as more awareness for effective prevention and control of COVID-19.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Esubalew T. Mindaye ◽  
Bekalu Assaminew ◽  
Goytom K. Tesfay

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a pandemic affecting over 106 million and killing over 2.3 million people. Inadequate knowledge of the disease coupled with scarce or improper use of infection prevention and control (IPC) measures by healthcare workers (HCWs) and support staff may be contributing to the rapid spread of infection. This survey aims to assess knowledge, risk perception, and precaution practices of HCWs and support staff toward COVID-19 under resource-constrained circumstances at a major referral hospital in Ethiopia. An institution-based survey was conducted in April 2020 using 422 subjects selected by stratified random sampling. A five-section survey instrument was distributed, and the collected responses were cleaned and entered into Epi data (v3.1) and exported to SPSS (v.26) for further statistical analysis. The survey found that about 58% of the HCWs and support staff in the hospital appear to have adequate awareness and perceive COVID-19 to be a high-risk disease. Seven out of 10 subjects practice some form of IPC measures. However, the knowledge among allied HCWs and support staff appears to be inadequate. Gender, occupation, and years in service correlated with the level of awareness. Of those surveyed, 78% were concerned about the lack of personal protective equipment and perceived public transportation to be a high-risk factor for the transmission of infection. Additional campaigns may be necessary to reinforce existing knowledge of HCWs, but more emphasis should be geared toward educating allied HCWs and support staff.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s373-s373
Author(s):  
Md. Reaj Khan Babar ◽  
Shahana Parveen ◽  
Md. Zakiul Hassan ◽  
Md Shariful Amin Sumon ◽  
Kanij Fatima Chanda ◽  
...  

Background: Despite gradual economic growth in Bangladesh, healthcare facilities are still resource limited and do not measure up to the standard to practice for infection prevention and control (IPC) in reducing the risk of hospital-acquired infections. We assessed the existing resources and facilities in tertiary-care public hospitals to guide a context-specific low-resource IPC intervention for routine use in Hospital wards. Methods: We conducted the study in 3 tertiary-care hospitals from November 2017 to January 2018. The study team collected data on existing facilities and resources associated with IPC strategy from hospital records, semi-structured interviews with different level healthcare staff (n = 176) and spot checks (n = 30). Results: The mean bed occupancy rates for study hospitals were 165%, 200%, and 150%, respectively, on admission days. Among study wards, medicine ward (230%) had the highest bed occupancy rate. Different types of patients were placed together in the wards, and there were no isolation areas for highly infectious patients. Moreover, 22%–58% posts of physicians, 15%–20% of nurses and 38%–42% of support staff were vacant against the authorized posts in these hospitals. There were no usable handwashing facilities for support staff, patients, and family caregivers; however, all the allocated handwashing facilities for physicians and nurses were functional. On average, 50% fewer surgical gloves were provided than were actually required. Although supplies of masks were available in the surgery theater, no supplies in general wards were recorded. Disposable nasal cannula for oxygen and nebulizer masks was unavailable; hence, providers had to reuse this equipment for multiple patients. Most of the autoclave machines (20 of 30) were nonfunctional; therefore, one-third of the surgical instruments could not be sterilized by autoclaving. None of the hospital wards followed the 3 steps of surface cleaning, and no segregation of hazardous wastes was observed. All kind of wastes were dumped in the selected open area within the hospital premises. Healthcare workers (n = 110) directly involved in patient care reported that hand hygiene is usually not possible between patient visits. High turnover of patients and shortage of healthcare staff were reported as major barriers to IPC practices, specifically hand hygiene and environmental cleaning. There was no active committee nor specific training program on IPC for healthcare staff. Conclusions: Existing resources and facilities of these hospitals did not support a standard IPC strategy. Coordination from policy level to implementation with proper allocation of resources is required to ensure a practical IPC strategy.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


2005 ◽  
Vol 24 (4, Suppl) ◽  
pp. S106-S110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin D. McCaul ◽  
Ellen Peters ◽  
Wendy Nelson ◽  
Michael Stefanek

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