COVID-19 Briefing: Begging for PPE; Telehealth; Sepsis
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May 30, 2020

How to Balance the COVID-19 Outbreak With "Business as Usual"

While the COVID-19 outbreak has created obstacles to routine care, you can take steps to help maintain “business as usual.” Two of the most important things you can do during a pandemic is to stay informed and practice self-care. It's our mission to help you do both during this critical time. Stay up-to-date with the articles below and read a recent article on our After Rounds blog for self-care strategies, including taking breaks to recharge. Thank you for your service, stay safe.

The latest from Lippincott® Journals

Today we are making our voices heard as we beg for more PPE to protect nurses and other healthcare providers. 

Can audiovisual technologies employed by telehealth and telerehabilitation help?

In this article, the authors briefly discuss COVID19-associated procoagulant and anticoagulant states in the context of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support.

An analysis of the WHO Pharmacovigilance Database

In this paper, the authors report a case of 8-year-old recovered child, who was rehospitalized because of unexplained fever.

NEW CHART AVAILABLE on Understanding COVID-19 

Illustrations that show how the virus spreads and areas of the body that are affected.

More from Lippincott® Journals

This mini review provides fundamental knowledge on coincidence of COVID-19 infection and smell-taste perception disorders from an objective perspective.

Is it necessary for ICU staff to be continuously present in patient rooms to perform alarm checks and setting changes, especially when PPE is scarce? Take a look at  a novel, inexpensive anesthesia machine modification that would allow for remote control and monitoring of ventilation.

In this paper, the authors share the design, creation,  and preliminary outcomes at their institution of a streamlined multidisciplinary procedure team: the COVID-19 Bundled Response for Access (COBRA) team.

This article summarizes how NYC gastroenterology departments have responded to this pandemic, a scourge that has invaded our hospitals, offices, units,  and psyche.

Guidelines on the management of critically ill adults with COVID-19