Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment
Abstract Objective Air medical transport of patients with known or suspected coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) likely represents a high‐risk exposure to crew members as aircraft cabins are quite small resulting in close personal contact. The actual risk to medical crew members is not known. Method...
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doaj-3f64f449c37948b5b085eb4a857bdd992021-04-28T12:02:33ZengWileyJournal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open2688-11522021-04-0122n/an/a10.1002/emp2.12389Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipmentDarren Braude0Michael Lauria1Margaret O'Donnell2Jodine Shelly3Michael Berve4Mike Torres5Dave Olvera6Sean Jarboe7Anna Mazon8Douglas Dixon9Lifeguard Air Emergency Services Department of Emergency Medicine University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USALifeguard Air Emergency Services Department of Emergency Medicine University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USALifeguard Air Emergency Services University of New Mexico USAGuardian Flight USASan Juan Regional Air Care USAPHI Air Medical USAAir Methods Corporation USATrans Aero Medevac USAGuardian Flight USALifeguard Air Emergency Services Department of Emergency Medicine University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USAAbstract Objective Air medical transport of patients with known or suspected coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) likely represents a high‐risk exposure to crew members as aircraft cabins are quite small resulting in close personal contact. The actual risk to medical crew members is not known. Methods We conducted an institutional review board‐exempt, retrospective study of air medical transport of patients with known or suspected COVID‐19 by 8 programs in the Four Corners Region to determine the number of symptomatic COVID‐19 among air medical crew members compared to total exposure time. All programs used similar routine personal protective equipment (PPE), including N‐95 masks and eye protection. Total exposure time was considered from time of first patient contact until handoff at a receiving hospital. Results There were 616 air transports: 62% by fixed‐wing and 38% by rotor‐wing aircraft between March 15 and September 6, 2020. Among transported patients, 407 (66%) were confirmed COVID+ and 209 (34%) were under investigation. Patient contact time ranged from 38 to 432 minutes with an average of 140 minutes. The total exposure time for medical crew was 2924 hours; exposure time to confirmed COVID+ patients was 2008 hours. Only 30% of patients were intubated, and the remainder had no oxygen (8%), low‐flow nasal cannula (42%), mask (11%), high‐flow nasal cannula (4.5%), and continuous positive airway pressure or bilevel positive airway pressure (3.5%). Two flight crew members out of 108 developed COVID that was presumed related to work. Conclusions Air medical transport of patients with known or suspected COVID‐19 using routine PPE is considered effective for protecting medical crew members, even when patients are not intubated. This has implications for health care personnel in any setting that involves care of patients with COVID‐19 in similarly confined spaces.https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12389air medicalCOVID‐19HEMSoccupational healthPPEsafety |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Darren Braude Michael Lauria Margaret O'Donnell Jodine Shelly Michael Berve Mike Torres Dave Olvera Sean Jarboe Anna Mazon Douglas Dixon |
spellingShingle |
Darren Braude Michael Lauria Margaret O'Donnell Jodine Shelly Michael Berve Mike Torres Dave Olvera Sean Jarboe Anna Mazon Douglas Dixon Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open air medical COVID‐19 HEMS occupational health PPE safety |
author_facet |
Darren Braude Michael Lauria Margaret O'Donnell Jodine Shelly Michael Berve Mike Torres Dave Olvera Sean Jarboe Anna Mazon Douglas Dixon |
author_sort |
Darren Braude |
title |
Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment |
title_short |
Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment |
title_full |
Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment |
title_fullStr |
Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment |
title_full_unstemmed |
Safety of air medical transport of patients with COVID‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment |
title_sort |
safety of air medical transport of patients with covid‐19 by personnel using routine personal protective equipment |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open |
issn |
2688-1152 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
Abstract Objective Air medical transport of patients with known or suspected coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) likely represents a high‐risk exposure to crew members as aircraft cabins are quite small resulting in close personal contact. The actual risk to medical crew members is not known. Methods We conducted an institutional review board‐exempt, retrospective study of air medical transport of patients with known or suspected COVID‐19 by 8 programs in the Four Corners Region to determine the number of symptomatic COVID‐19 among air medical crew members compared to total exposure time. All programs used similar routine personal protective equipment (PPE), including N‐95 masks and eye protection. Total exposure time was considered from time of first patient contact until handoff at a receiving hospital. Results There were 616 air transports: 62% by fixed‐wing and 38% by rotor‐wing aircraft between March 15 and September 6, 2020. Among transported patients, 407 (66%) were confirmed COVID+ and 209 (34%) were under investigation. Patient contact time ranged from 38 to 432 minutes with an average of 140 minutes. The total exposure time for medical crew was 2924 hours; exposure time to confirmed COVID+ patients was 2008 hours. Only 30% of patients were intubated, and the remainder had no oxygen (8%), low‐flow nasal cannula (42%), mask (11%), high‐flow nasal cannula (4.5%), and continuous positive airway pressure or bilevel positive airway pressure (3.5%). Two flight crew members out of 108 developed COVID that was presumed related to work. Conclusions Air medical transport of patients with known or suspected COVID‐19 using routine PPE is considered effective for protecting medical crew members, even when patients are not intubated. This has implications for health care personnel in any setting that involves care of patients with COVID‐19 in similarly confined spaces. |
topic |
air medical COVID‐19 HEMS occupational health PPE safety |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12389 |
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