
New Surgical Practice During COVID 19
Author(s) -
Mohammad Sohail Asghar,
Hafiz Syed Zaigham Ali Shah,
Hamna Khan,
Aima Zahid,
Hammad Zia,
Mohammad Musaab
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the professional medical journal/the professional medical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2071-7733
pISSN - 1024-8919
DOI - 10.29309/tpmj/2021.28.05.5870
Subject(s) - outbreak , medicine , covid-19 , isolation (microbiology) , infection control , china , health care , transmission (telecommunications) , pneumonia , personal protective equipment , medical emergency , environmental health , family medicine , disease , intensive care medicine , virology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , geography , economic growth , bioinformatics , archaeology , engineering , electrical engineering , economics , biology
A sequence of pneumonia-causing diseases from the Novel coronavirus (COVID-19) appeared in Wuhan, Hubei, China in December 2019. The outbreak of COVID-19 spread quite rapidly. Just as we write this report, almost two and a half million verified cases were reported globally, and almost 180,000 people died.1 Experience from China reveals that COVID-19 outbreaks can be brought under control within 3 months, with highly efficient touch tracking and case isolation.2 Healthcare staff are at the forefront of treatment for COVID-19 cases and have a very large chance of exposure to the infection.3 Cuts in disposable gear and COVID-19 awareness are triggering infections in healthcare workers.4 As of February 11, 2020, China has contaminated more than 1,700 health-care workers. In Italy, 2026 (9 percent) of the COVID-19 incidents happened in healthcare professionals (as of March 15).5 But, 31 medical teams containing more than 42,000 nurses and doctors sent by the Hubei from other provinces did not have a reported infection. It indicates that sufficient information about the transmission of disease and the use of protective equipment and procedures to manage infections is necessary to avoid the spread of infection among health care staff.