Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

COVID: KNOW YOUR HOME CARE FACTS

- By Dr Ruvaiz Haniffa

Most people with COVID-19 develop a mild or uncomplica­ted illness that can be managed at the primary care level, and the demand for primary care services will escalate during periods of increased transmissi­on. Health policymake­rs at the national and sub-national level will need to take appropriat­e action to support the role of primary care in the response, such as managing mild COVID-19 cases or recovery of hospitalis­ed cases, identifyin­g strategies to increase surge capacity, managing and maintainin­g stocks of personal protective equipment (PPE) and other essential supplies, and maintainin­g of essential services, while ensuring timely adaptation to address the needs of vulnerable groups.

With the rapidly increasing incidence of COVID-19 in Sri Lanka and the health system’s possible inability to provide in-hospital care for PCR positive COVID19 patients; the HOME as a setting for clinical care provision for asymptomat­ic mild COVID -19 patients may indeed become possible or even necessary. In this context preemptive planning for the provision of home-based care for carefully clinically triaged and selected patients becomes important.

As per the WHO, COVID-19 is classified into three clinical entities- mild, moderate, and severe (Fig.1). People classified as having mild COIVID-19 with no symptoms should be able to stay at home if adequately isolated from others. This also implies that if you are symptomati­c even with mild COVID19 you will require hospital admission.

THE DECISION TO CARE FOR COVID-19 PATIENTS AT HOME.

This decision cannot and should not be made by the patient or the family. This decision must be made after clinical triage by a healthcare team which must include a family physician and social worker who is aware of the patient’s physical home infrastruc­ture in addition to the past and current health status of the patient. Home care should be considered for an adult or child with confirmed COIVD-19 when in-patient care is unviable or unsafe (e.g. when health care service capacity is insufficie­nt). It must be understood that home care increases the risk of transmitti­ng the virus to others at home.

However, isolation of people at home and using the home as a clinical setting to provide care to carefully selected patients can make an important contributi­on to breaking the chain of transmissi­on of the virus.

Home care (provided requiremen­ts are fulfilled) should ideally be considered for individual­s under the age of 60 yrs, who do not smoke, are not obese and have no other diseases such as cardiovasc­ular diseases, diabetes mellitus, chronic lung disease, cancer, chronic kidney disease or immune suppressed.

The decision to isolate and care for an infected person at home depends on the following 3 factors.

Clinical evaluation of the COVID-19 patient evaluation of the home setting (Please see Box 1).

FACTORS TO CONSIDER WHEN ASSESSING HOME AS CLINICAL SETTING FOR COVID-19 CARE

• Is the person with COVID-19 living alone? If so, what support network do they have? If not, who is living in the household with them?

• How is the person with COVID-19 and their family living? How feasible and practical would it be to implement recommenda­tions? What alternativ­e options are available? • What are the needs related to disability, caring responsibi­lities for adults, older adults or children? What are the needs of other household members?

• How feasible is it for one caregiver to be identified to support the person with COVID-19 at home?

• What do household members know about COVID-19 and preventing transmissi­on in the home? What are their informatio­n needs about COVID-19 and transmissi­on prevention? Does the household know where to seek additional support or informatio­n related to care for the person with COVID-19 if needed?

• What does the person with COVID-19 and/or their household members think they need to be able to cope at home?

• Does the family understand when to call for medical assistance? Do they have the means to call for medical assistance?

• What are the psychosoci­al needs of the person with COVID-19 and household members? What support is available to them related to coping with the emotional impact or fear of stigma?

• What is the economic impact on the household? Who is the primary provider financiall­y? What is the impact if that person needs to be isolated and/or to carry additional household or care responsibi­lities?

• Which health facility and, if possible, named profession­al is responsibl­e for following up the care of the person with COVID-19? How will follow up of this care be maintained?

In the Sri Lankan context of considerin­g home as a clinical setting for COVID-19 home care, the following in addition to Box 1 should also be considered.

2.1. Adequate floor space area with the minimum of two individual rooms, adequate natural ventilatio­n and two toilets 2.2. Home should preferably have access to running water. 2.3. The infected patient/family should be equipped with communicat­ion facilities to contact healthcare providers routinely and in an emergency.

Ability to monitor the clinical evolution of the person at home.

WHAT TO MONITOR IN A COVID19 POSITIVE PATIENT RECEIVING HOME CARE?

The patient and caregiver must be advised about the signs and symptoms of complicati­ons or how to recognise deteriorat­ion in their health status that requires medical attention.

The most important parameters to monitor in the home setting are fever, difficulty in breathing, fast or shallow breathing, blue lips or face, chest pain or pressure, confusion (which was not present earlier), inability to wake up, inability to interact when awake and inability to drink or keep liquids down. For infants in addition to these, grunting and inability to breastfeed also must be considered. (Please note this list is not an exhaustive list and if you have any doubt, please contact the healthcare team immediatel­y)

Home pulse oximetry is a safe, non-invasive way to assess oxygen saturation in the blood and can support the early identifica­tion of low oxygen levels in patients with initially mild or moderate COVID-19 or when the patient does not appear short of breath but their oxygen levels are lower than expected (Silent Hypoxia). Home pulse oximetry can identify individual­s in need of medical evaluation, oxygen therapy or hospitalis­ation, even before they show clinical signs of worsening signs or symptoms.

This author is of the view that if home care for a mild asymptomat­ic COVID-19 positive patient is recommende­d the minimum requiremen­t should also include the possession or access to a finger pulse oximeter.

WHAT SHOULD BE DONE TO PREVENT OTHER PEOPLE IN THE HOUSE FROM BECOMING SICK IF A PERSON WITH COVID-19 IS BEING CARED FOR AT HOME?

It is highly recommende­d that the patient, caregiver/s are given a simple and short orientatio­n programme to use the provided equipment and to create awareness on the ‘red-flag signs to look out for and contact the primary health care provider for further instructio­ns.

Several precaution­s can prevent the spread of COVID19 to other people in the house:

The ill person should stay in a separate room. If this is not possible, then keep at least a 1-metre distance from them. The sick person and anyone else in the same room should wear a medical mask.

Provide good ventilatio­n in the room of the ill person and shared spaces, and open windows if possible and safe to do so.

The ill person should wear a medical mask as much as possible, in particular when not alone in the room and when at least a 1-metre distance from others cannot be maintained. Limit the patient’s movement around the house and minimise shared spaces. Ensure shared spaces (e.g. kitchen, bathroom) are well ventilated. Visitors should not be allowed in the home. Limit the number of caregivers to one person with no underlying conditions, if possible.

Caregivers and household members should wear a medical mask while in the same room with an ill person, not touch their mask or face during use, discard the mask after leaving the room, and wash their hands afterwards.

The ill person should have dedicated dishes, cups, eating utensils, towels and bed linens. They should be washed with soap and water, and not shared.

Frequently touched surfaces by the ill person should be cleaned and disinfecte­d at least daily.

Everyone in the household should wash their hands with soap and water regularly, especially:

„ after coughing or sneezing

„ before during and after you prepare food

„ before eating

„ after using the toilet

„ before and after caring for the ill person

„ when hands are visibly dirty

A cough or sneeze should be covered with a flexed elbow or a disposable tissue that is discarded immediatel­y after use.

The waste from the ill person should be packed in strong closed bags before disposal.

The household (patient and care giver/s) should be encouraged to have a steady supply of masks (essential, 3 ply surgical mask would do), face shield (optional), disposable or washable overalls (optional), 70% alcohol hand sanitiser (optional in the presence of clean running water and soap)

HOW LONG SHOULD PEOPLE WITH COVID-19 STAY AT HOME AND IN ISOLATION?

People with COVID-19 who are cared for at home should stay in isolation until they are no longer able to transmit the virus to others:

Those with symptoms should stay isolated for a minimum of 10 days after the first day they developed symptoms, plus another 3 days after the end of symptoms – when they are without fever and without respirator­y symptoms.

People without symptoms should stay isolated for a minimum of 10 days after testing positive.

Please check with your Family Physician/phi for updated release from home isolation guidelines as they subject to update.

CONCLUSION

Primary care is an essential foundation for the global response to COVID-19. Primary care plays a significan­t role in gatekeepin­g and clinical responses: identifyin­g and triaging possible COVID-19 cases, making an early diagnosis, helping vulnerable people cope with their anxiety about the virus, and reducing the demand for hospital services.

The government/health authoritie­s by allowing the home care of mild or asymptomat­ic COVID-19 patients are taking us the people of Sri Lanka into their confidence and giving us the responsibi­lity to actually be part of the clinical care process of COVID-19 management in Sri Lanka. Let us not disappoint the government/health authoritie­s by misusing, manipulati­ng, and abusing the trust they have placed in us. Let us show them that we the people of Sri Lanka if given responsibi­lity will deliver on it in the context of home care for COVID-19 patients.

The writer is a family physician and is the Head of the Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Colombo and Past President of the Sri Lanka Medical Associatio­n (SLMA).

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