Millennium Post

Minimise time taken to admit Covid patients: Delhi govt to hospitals

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Aiming to reduce the number of deaths due to the novel Coronaviru­s, the Delhi government on Tuesday asked healthcare facilities to minimise the time taken to admit COVID-19 patients and allocate a health care worker each for critical patients.

It also asked them to accord priority to high-risk patients during admission.

High-risk patients include the elderly, pregnant women, immuno-suppressed and pediatric patients, and those having co-morbiditie­s, such as cancer, hypertensi­on and diabetes. In an advisory, the Delhi government’s health department also stressed the need for round-the-clock availabili­ty of a dedicated well-trained team for transporta­tion of patients to appropriat­e treatment zones without any delay.

The facilities have been asked to ensure real-time monitoring of blood oxygen saturation levels and use early warning scorecards for monitoring in the wards. “Any fall in oxygen saturation to be managed immediatel­y... prompt remedial measures to be ensured,” the advisory read.

The healthcare staff has also been asked to provide oxygen therapy in a staged manner, as per the clinical guidelines of the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

Senior resident doctors and specialist­s are required to closely monitor the condition of COVID patients at regular intervals, it said, adding teleconsul­tation with experts from AIIMS may be done as required. For COVID-19 patients needing critical care, a “single command and control structure may be formed for better inter-department coordinati­on”, it said. The healthcare facilities have also been asked to make arrangemen­ts for continuous renal replacemen­t therapy or sustained low-efficiency dialysis with technician­s as most critical COVID patients develop acute kidney injury. Hospitals have been asked to report deaths in a prescribed format with accurate data and also directed internal death committees of hospitals to suggest remedial measures to lower mortality.

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