Dr. Dave CampbellMorning Joe Chief Medical Correspondent
Hospitals around the country are preparing for an influx of coronavirus cases that may require critical care, including ventilators. To handle the increased volume of patients that could potentially overwhelm hospitals Surge Capacity Protocols, we can turn to ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) as part of a mitigation plan. Expectations are for the coronavirus pandemic to worsen. The United States can prepare for the worst while hoping for the best and by turning to an already established means of healthcare service.
The United States healthcare infrastructure needs to be concerned with three factors: Space, Personnel and Equipment to prepare for the inevitable rise in coronavirus infected patients.
“The capacity of this government to fully understand the impact of COVID-19 on this nation,” Dr. Leslie Diaz, Infectious Disease Medical Director for Foundcare AND Chair of Infection Control, Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center said Wednesday March 18. “Is equivalent to a 5-year-old trying to solve a calculus problem.”
There are 5,800 ASCs across the United States. We can co-opt and expand these facilities to provide additional space, personnel and equipment to help expand Surge Capacity and provider care services.
Surgery centers can unload the demand for space, personnel and equipment for hospitalized COVID-19 care by expanding outpatient care for URGENT ELECTIVE procedures.
SPACE
To increase hospital bed and room availability early in the pandemic, Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance companies can give special authorization for additional urgent elective procedures to be completed in ASCs, rather than in hospitals. Currently, many surgeries are only authorized to be performed in hospitals. By loosening this restriction, hospitals will keep additional hospital beds available to handle the influx of coronavirus patients as they arise. Some acute medical conditions cannot wait for the hoped-for summer lull in the coronavirus pandemic. In the field of orthopaedic surgery, just a few of these may include spinal cord or nerve damage due to trauma, tumors, or large disc herniations, broken arms and legs, and much more. Other surgical fields have their own list of conditions that create indications for urgent elective surgery. One administrator for a large company managing scores of ASC’s said there may be up to 1000 procedures that could be specially authorized by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) or private insurance companies for completion in ASCs.
To further increase space needs later if, Heaven forbid, the pandemic progresses and overburdens hospitals Surge Capacity and intensive care capacity. We can use ASC’s as TRIAGE STATIONS. County Emergency Management Plans already in place might call for such contingencies. Commandeering surgery centers is a drastic step no one wants to consider, but must be, if sick patients are subjected to rationing of care or wind up laying in the hallways of hospitals gasping for air.
PERSONNEL
Healthcare workers represent the personnel that must be protected in a crisis of this magnitude. Many ASC employees have hospital experience. They can work harder and longer hours to lighten the load on those healthcare workers still working in hospitals. In China, like in all outbreaks, exhausted healthcare workers with inadequate Personal Protection Equipment, (eye protection, masks, gloves and gowns) are at higher risk of infection. Young doctors in China have died, despite the proclamations that only the old and immunocompromised die.
Patients that are seriously ill require extensive face to face time with doctors, nurses and other support staff in hospitals. The potential for repetitive exposure with multiple infected patients and higher levels of viral load exposure creates grave risk for healthcare workers. And they know it and still get up and go to work every day, unless they are also sick. When a healthcare worker on the front line of this battle against the coronavirus gets sick, they are no longer available to provide care, and many will need to be hospitalized themselves, further compromising space, personnel, and equipment shortages.
We need to protect healthcare workers like gold, a precious, invaluable resource.
EQUIPMENT
To address the need for equipment, it is the tragic reality that ventilators are not readily available on the world-wide market for the United States. Other countries with more advanced numbers of critically ill, and countries that experienced dramatic increases in COVID-19 infections have already bought them up.








