COVID-19 Weekly Briefing: How to protect the frontline
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May 2, 2020

Stay Up to Date

One of the most important things you can do as a healthcare professional during a pandemic is to stay informed. With all the media hype and the sometimes wild theories about the outbreak circulating on the internet, this can be more challenging than it sounds. That's why we maintain our commitment to continue updating you on new COVID-19 resources and tools from Wolters Kluwer Health.

 

Staying informed is not only important for your clinical practice, but it also allows you to share information with your patients so that they, too, know how to protect themselves and their families. Stay safe, and thank you for your service.

The latest from Lippincott® Journals

Nurses are going into work every day, committed to providing quality of care to combat this pandemic.

Key considerations for surgical teams operating on patients with suspected or known COVID-19 is highlighted in this review.

This review aims to address both the mechanism of the contagion and the capabilities of PPE in the perioperative setting in the context of the current COVID-19 pandemic.

A cardiologist shares perspectives on how to change clinical practices to respond to healthcare supply shortages.

A conceptual framework to guide surge capacity protocols for non-emergent surgery is shared in this new article.

WATCH A COVID-19 VIDEO

COVID-19: What Do We Not Yet Know That We Need To Understand

 

This joint webinar was moderated by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the American College of Emergency Physicians Presidents along with an invited expert panel from both societies to address difficult questions regarding managing COVID-19 patients.

 

More from Lippincott® Journals

Early experiences of the pandemic from orthopaedic surgeons in China, Singapore, and Italy provide an opportunity to take proactive and preventive measures to protect all involved in pediatric orthopaedic care.

Now is the time to consider wider adoption of prehabilitation for patients awaiting surgery — physical and psychological assessments that establish a baseline functional level, identify impairments, and provide interventions.

Guidelines from the recently formed International Mg/COVID-19 Working Group led by Saiju Jacob, MD, PhD from  the University Hospitals Birmingham in the United Kingdom; Srikanth Muppidi, MD from Stanford University School of Medicine in the US; and Dr. Nowak, director of the Yale MG Clinic in the US.

Is there an association between in-hospital use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) and all-cause mortality?

Recommendations from the initial epicenter of the pandemic in the United States

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