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Lessons Learned from SARS: The Hospital Perspective

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Title: Lessons Learned from SARS: The Hospital Perspective


1
Lessons Learned from SARS The Hospital
Perspective
Brian Schwartz, MD. CCFP(EM), FCFP Sunnybrook and
Womens College Health Sciences Center Assistant
Professor, Faculty of Medicine, University of
Toronto Vice-Chair, Ontario SARS Scientific
Advisory Committee
2
City of Toronto
  • Canadas largest city
  • 2.5 million residents
  • 5 million people most business days
  • 632 square kilometers
  • Financial capital of Canada

3
City of Toronto
  • One-third of Canadas population is located
    within 120 miles of Toronto
  • One-half of the population of the United States
    is within a 1 days drive
  • Canadas 1 tourist destination with 21 million
    visitors in 1999
  • 48 of residents were born elsewhere
  • Canadas gateway to international marketplace

4
City of Toronto home of famous celebrities!
5
Ontario
Popn 829, 800
Popn 10, 839, 500
Total Population of Ontario 11, 669, 300 in the
Year 2000
Metropolitan Areas 8, 339,
500 Non-Metropolitan Areas 283, 400
6
Outline
  1. What happened and what we found out
  2. Safety Personal protection
  3. Containing the Outbreak
  4. Maintenance of Services
  5. Lessons for the future

7
What happened? Demographics
  • 375 probable/suspect cases (40 HCWs)
  • 44 deaths (3 HCWs)
  • Mortality higher with age (3lt60, 53gt60), and
    comorbidity
  • Transmission associated with sicker patients,
    less protection, aerosol-
    generating procedures

8
Impact of SARS on Toronto Hospitals
  • 3 Toronto hospitals closed to admissions for
    varying periods
  • 2/3 of hospitals had SARS patients
  • Services affected in all hospitals
  • Minimal surge capacity
  • Some capacity in LTC

9
Toronto Hospitals
10
Toronto Hospitals affected by SARS
11
What we found out
  • We were neither prepared for communicable
    diseases nor a major emergency event
  • Providing ED care was a huge challenge due to
    staff illness, quarantine and protection issues

12
What we found out
  • Our weaknesses were exposed
  • Overcrowding
  • Poor infection control
  • Lack of emergency preparedness
  • Staffing and resource vulnerability

13
2. Safety Personal Protective Equipment
  • Evidence vs. Emotion

14
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15
April 13, 2003
16
April 13, 2003
17
April, 2003
  • 9 HCWs contracted SARS after caring for a
    patient, despite using PPE
  • 6/9 were present during intubation
  • Led to
  • widespread concern about and increase in levels
    of PPE worn, and
  • Recommendation for higher level of protection
    for high risk procedures

18
PPE Evidence?
19
Standards Levels of Evidence
  1. Positive RCTs
  2. Neutral RCTs
  3. Prospective, nonrandom
  4. Case series
  5. Animal studies
  6. Extrapolations
  7. Rational conjecture

20
Level of Evidence 1
21
Level of Evidence 6/7
22
Best Evidence for PPE April 2003
  • Expert opinion
  • Anecdotal lessons learned
  • Extrapolation to other venues

23
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24
Emerging Evidence Seto et al, Lancet, May 2003
  • Lower risk of HCW acquiring SARS with
  • Gown P.006
  • Gloves OR 0.5 (.14,1.6)
  • Handwashing OR 0.2 (.07,1)
  • Masks OR 0.08 (.02,.33)

25
Seto et al Conclusions
  • Droplet precautions (handwashing, masks, gowns
    and gloves) are effective in reducing the risk of
    infection after exposure to patients with SARS
  • Reduction significant only for masks
  • No caregiver who practiced all 4 measures became
    infected

26
PPE Recommendations 2003
  • Droplet precautions (surgical mask eye
    protection) for Febrile Respiratory Illness
  • N95s, face shield, gowns, gloves, for suspected
    SARS patients during outbreak

27
Exposure Risk in ICU
  • Loeb et al. Emerg Inf Dis Feb, 2004
  • 8/32 ICU nurses entering room vs 0/11 others
    (P0.09)
  • Risks
  • assisting with intubation RR4.2 (1.5, 11.1)
  • suctioning before intubation RR4.2 (same)
  • Nebulizer Rx RR 3.24 (1.1, 9.4)
  • manipulation O2 mask RR9.0 (1.3,65)

28
Aerosol-generating High-risk Procedures
  • Intubation
  • Airway suction
  • Nebulized therapy
  • Positive pressure ventilation

29
What happened?
  • It became clear that even if SARS was not
    transmitted by airborne spread, aerosol
    generating procedures were very high risk and
    needed special precautions

30
Effectiveness of Precautions Loeb et al.
  • Lower risk with
  • Gloves OR 0.45 (0.4, 4.5)
  • Gown OR 0.36 (0.1,1.2)
  • N95/surgical mask OR 0.23 (0.07,0.78)
  • Surgical mask OR 0.45 (0.07, 2.7)
  • N95 OR 0.22 (0.05, 0.93)

31
But
  • There were still a few HCWs who wore appropriate
    protection during these high risk exposures and
    still contracted SARS!

32
April 13, 2003
33
Use of PPE During High Risk Procedures
  • Inadequate protection or improper use of adequate
    protection?
  • Other factors
  • No fit testing as yet
  • Incomplete education on donning and removal of PPE

34
This? - Mask and Face Protection
35
Or This? - PAPR
36
PAPR
  • Positive
  • Airway
  • Pressure
  • Respirator

37
PPE Recommendations forHigh-risk Procedures -
2003
  • Droplet precautions for all (Seto, Loeb)
    including Febrile Respiratory Illness (FRI)
    patients
  • N95s, eye protection (goggles and face shield)
    gowns, gloves for FRI during outbreak (Loeb)
  • PPS/PAPRs for SARS patients

38
Environmental needs for High-risk procedures
during outbreaks
  • Negative pressure rooms
  • Appropriate isolation, disinfection and disposal
    of equipment
  • Protection of patients during transport within
    and outside of hospital

39
PPE Education is Imperative!
40
Personal Protective Equipment
  • Basic infection control measures must be learned
    and applied consistently
  • PPE must be used based on best evidence/best
    practice
  • PPE must be applied properly
  • This message must be universal

41
3.Containing the Outbreak
42
Containing the Outbreak
  • Hospital IMS
  • Screening
  • Provincial Transport Authorization Center

43
Hospital IMS
44
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45
Incident Manager
Executive Officers
Public Information Officer
Health Safety
Liaison
Operations
Planning
Logistics
Finance
Med Director
Supplies
Med. staffing
Security
Triage
Material
Accommodation
Nsg. staffing
ED/OR/CrCU
Costing
Communication
Volunteers
Pharmacy
Nutrition
Med/Surg
Investigations
Facilities
Lab
Strategies
Imaging
Morgue
46
Hospital Screening
47
Hospital Screening
48
Hospital Screening
49
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50
Screening tool
  • Universal screening used in
  • Hospitals
  • Patients
  • Staff
  • Visitors
  • Community health settings
  • Mission critical areas
  • Government agencies
  • Private industry

51
Provincial Transfer Authorization Center
52
PTAC Developed By
53
SARS Facility Screening
54
SARS Transfer Approved
55
PTAC results (MacDonald et al. PEC, 2004)
  • 13 SARS patients identified from acute care and
    LTC facilities
  • No reported spread of SARS during interfacility
    transfer
  • Approved for continued operation as of December
    2003

56
4. Maintenance of Services
  • Impact on hospitals
  • Working quarantine
  • Staff support
  • Patient care issues

57
Impact on hospitals
58
Sunnybrook Womens
  • 350 beds
  • University of Toronto teaching hospital
  • Lead Trauma and Burn Center
  • Orthopedics, PG, Oncology, Cardiac
    Neurosciences
  • Base Hospital for paramedics of Toronto EMS
    Ontario Air Ambulance

59
SARS at Sunnybrook
  • Principal tertiary referring hospital
  • Admitted 71 SARS patients March 14 May 24, 2003
  • 1000 patients seen at SARS assessment clinic

60
SARS Screening Clinics
61
SARS Screening Clinics
62
Avg. Daily ED Census
63
SARS at Sunnybrook
  • ICU closed April 19-30
  • Left 1 adult trauma unit open in the city
  • Isolation of dozens of patients
  • PPE issues
  • Staffing issues

64
Trauma/ICU Issues
  • Due to cancellation of elective cardiac, cancer
    and neurosurgery, emergent critical care services
    were maintained
  • Isolation negative pressure resources were
    limited
  • Still short staffed due to quarantine!

65
Maintenance of Services
  • A network of SARS hospitals (the SARS alliance)
    was considered in SARS I and created during SARS
    II with mixed reviews
  • Capacity was created with movement of long stay
    patients to ALC facilities
  • Working quarantine was created

66
Paramedics on Quarantine
Days on Quarantine 2035 Ave Days on Q 7.8
67
Home quarantine
  • Confined to home
  • Mask while in same room as others
  • Separate towels/drinking cups/cutlery
  • Sleep in separate rooms if possible
  • Temp twice daily and report to Public Health if
    gt380 C

68
Working Quarantine
  • Same as home quarantine, except
  • PPE at all times en route to work (no public
    transit)
  • PPE at all times at work except on breaks
  • Keep 6 feet away from others if no PPE

69
Working Quarantine
70
Staff support
71
Hospital Disaster Staffing If You Call, Will
They Come?
  • Survey to hospital employees at 8 hospitals in 5
    states
  • 1874 surveys sent 1612 responses
  • 86 willing to come in after MCI
  • 58 willing after CBR event

72
Hospital Disaster Staffing If You Call, Will
They Come?
  • Support needs identified to increase response
  • Long-distance phone service (41)
  • Email access (34)
  • Pet care (33)
  • Child care (30)
  • Adult / elder care (7)

73
Provider support
  • Child/dependent care
  • Food/shopping/other supports while in quarantine
  • Transportation
  • Psychological support
  • Not adequate in most instances

74
Patient care issues
  • Access to care
  • Restrictions on care of individual patients

75
Access to careQuestions
  • What was the effect on morbidity and mortality in
    populations of patients with
  • Cardiac disease
  • Cancer
  • Arthritis
  • Did the psychological stress of staff and lack of
    visitors affect mortality?

76
Access to careQuestions
  • Determining the Population Health Impact of the
    Healthcare System Response to the SARS outbreak
    Stukel et al
  • Stay tuned..

77
b) Individual patient care
  • How did protection against SARS impact the care
    of critically ill patients?

78
CMAJ August 19, 2003
79
Critical Care issues
  • Response to cardiac arrests
  • Airway management in trauma patients with no
    history available
  • Resuscitation of known SARS patients

80
Should paramedics intubate patients with
SARS-like symptoms?
  • Risks
  • Safety of provider
  • Safety of bystanders / other patients
  • Cross-contamination
  • False sense of protection afforded by protective
    systems if not used correctly

81
Therefore
  • Research is needed to evaluate the impact of
    protective measures on non-SARS populations
  • The use of high risk procedures must be evaluated
    based on risk/benefit
  • Protection of practitioners is paramount

82
5. Lessons for the Future
83
Components of Emergency Response
  • Preparation
  • Recognition
  • Containment
  • Protection/decontamination
  • Treatment
  • Recovery

84
Hospitals Need IMS
  • Incident Management System is a method of
    coordinating parts of one agency or many agencies
    in a unified command structure to use all
    available resources in the effective and
    efficient response to an emergency.

85
ExpectationsHospital Standard-2003
  • A baseline level of protection for all potential
    exposures
  • A baseline level of preparedness
  • Immediate activation of hospitals emergency
    response plan
  • Plans for staff call back and personal maintenance

86
Expectation - System
  • A better system of communication and coordination
    within the Health Care sector centers of
    excellence / leadership
  • Data management, collection and analysis

87
SARS - Summary
88
SARS Lessons learned
  • Infection control
  • Disaster management

89
a) Infection control
  • Baseline infection control is essential at all
    times
  • Higher levels for aerosol-generating high risk
    procedures
  • Screening and protection must be universal during
    an outbreak

90
b) Disaster Management
  • Continuous preparation and vigilance
  • Incident Management Systems in our ED/hospitals
  • Integration among hospitals, emergency services,
    Public Health and government
  • Staff organization and support

91
Our Heroes
92
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