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Commentary| Volume 164, ISSUE 2, P387-388, August 2022

Commentary: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): Adaptive realignment makes me want to work eight days a week

  • Richard Lazzaro
    Correspondence
    Address for reprints: Richard Lazzaro, MD, FACS, Thoracic Surgery, Lenox Hill Hospital, 130 East 77th St, New York, NY 10075.
    Affiliations
    Department of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Northwell Health Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, NY

    Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra Northwell, Hempstead, NY
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  • Matthew Inra
    Affiliations
    Department of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Northwell Health Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, NY

    Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra Northwell, Hempstead, NY
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Published:December 02, 2021DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2021.11.073
      Figure thumbnail fx1
      Richard Lazzaro, MD, FACS, and Matthew Inra, MD
      Adaptive realignment allows hospitals and health systems to adapt to the system strains encountered by future pandemics and maintain surgical volume for better patient care and hospital fiscal health.
      See Article page 378.
      In this month's issue of the Journal, Villena-Vargas and colleagues
      • Villena-Vargas J.
      • Lutton E.
      • Mynard N.
      • Nasar A.
      • Voza F.
      • Chow O.
      • et al.
      Safety of lung cancer surgery during COVID-19 in a pandemic epicenter.
      report on the “safety of lung cancer surgery during COVID-19 in a pandemic epicenter.” The authors retrospectively reviewed a prospective database and identified 57 patients who underwent lung cancer resection before the pandemic (January 1, 2020, to March 10, 2020), and 41 patients during the initial phase of the pandemic (March 11, 2020, to June 10, 2020) who underwent lung cancer resection, with a primary end point of acquisition of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection during the first 90 days after surgery. Both 90-day perioperative morbidity and mortality were recorded as secondary end points. Acquisition of SARS-CoV-2 infection during the first 90 days after surgery was not significantly different between the 2 groups but tended to be more frequently acquired during the pandemic; 3.5% (2/57) of patients operated on before the pandemic and 7.3% (3/41) of patients during the initial phase of the pandemic acquired SARS-CoV-2 infection. Consistent with previous reports, acquisition of SARS-CoV-2 infection is associated with high mortality.
      • Villena-Vargas J.
      • Lutton E.
      • Mynard N.
      • Nasar A.
      • Voza F.
      • Chow O.
      • et al.
      Safety of lung cancer surgery during COVID-19 in a pandemic epicenter.
      The pandemic has affected all of us. A surgeon often reflects about quality, volume, academics, and mentoring. Experience leads to good judgment. We had no experience with SARS-CoV-2 before the pandemic and witnessed health systems and hospitals adapt immediately to an unknown foe. Intensive care units filled quickly to capacity, personal protective equipment was scarce, and resources to deliver patient care required limitations to elective surgery. “Shortage of ICU beds during the peaks → cancelling scheduled surgeries due to the lack of beds → hospital financial losses → staff furloughs → exacerbated shortage of staffed hospital beds coupled with ED overcrowding → delays in resuming elective surgeries and intensified financial strain.”
      • Litvak E.
      • Keshavjee S.
      • Gewertz B.L.
      • Fineberg H.V.
      How hospitals can save lives and themselves—lessons on patient flow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
      Villena-Vargas and colleagues
      • Villena-Vargas J.
      • Lutton E.
      • Mynard N.
      • Nasar A.
      • Voza F.
      • Chow O.
      • et al.
      Safety of lung cancer surgery during COVID-19 in a pandemic epicenter.
      not only advocate that patients undergo preoperative testing for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) but also that patients maintain mask-wearing and social distancing postdischarge to limit the risk of community-acquired SARS-CoV-2 infection. Restoring surgical services safely during the pandemic allows us to deliver care to those who require it, when there are no suitable alternatives and a delay in care would negatively impact that patient's well-being. Many surgeons and hospitals prefer to operate early in the week so that patients are discharged home by the weekend.
      • Litvak E.
      • Keshavjee S.
      • Gewertz B.L.
      • Fineberg H.V.
      How hospitals can save lives and themselves—lessons on patient flow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
      Critical to ensuring safe delivery of surgical care to patients “lies in smoothing surgical case volume across all weekdays (and, ideally, across 7 days a week where possible).”
      • Litvak E.
      • Keshavjee S.
      • Gewertz B.L.
      • Fineberg H.V.
      How hospitals can save lives and themselves—lessons on patient flow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
      “Hospitals that have streamlined their patient flow have enjoyed multimillion-dollar annual savings and substantial improvements in patient care.”
      • Litvak E.
      • Keshavjee S.
      • Gewertz B.L.
      • Fineberg H.V.
      How hospitals can save lives and themselves—lessons on patient flow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
      Redeployment of hospital staff and resources must be evaluated with a collective goal to maintain elective surgery, with equitable daily case distribution to avoid “artificially induced and uneven demand for hospital resources.”
      • Litvak E.
      • Keshavjee S.
      • Gewertz B.L.
      • Fineberg H.V.
      How hospitals can save lives and themselves—lessons on patient flow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
      Sir Paul McCartney once asked a chauffeur how he was doing. The chauffeur remarked, “working hard … eight days a week.” The time is appropriate for adaptive realignment (universally streamline services and optimize resources) so that hospitals and health care workers can work 8 days a week.

      References

        • Villena-Vargas J.
        • Lutton E.
        • Mynard N.
        • Nasar A.
        • Voza F.
        • Chow O.
        • et al.
        Safety of lung cancer surgery during COVID-19 in a pandemic epicenter.
        J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2022; 164: 378-385
        • Litvak E.
        • Keshavjee S.
        • Gewertz B.L.
        • Fineberg H.V.
        How hospitals can save lives and themselves—lessons on patient flow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
        Ann Surg. 2021; 274: 37-39

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