Cross-Infection Control of Coronavirus Disease 2019 at the Emergency Department in Taiwan

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SYSTEMS-LEVEL QUALITY IMPROVEMENT

Cross-Infection Control of Coronavirus Disease 2019 at the Emergency Department in Taiwan Chien-Fu Lin 1 & Kuan-Han Wu 1 & I-Min Chiu 1,2 Received: 25 June 2020 / Accepted: 15 July 2020 # Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has, as of today, spread in at least 200 countries and killed more than 470,000 people. To date, Taiwan has had 447 confirmed cases and ranks 148th on the list of infected areas. Most importantly, in Taiwan, there have been no health care professionals (HCPs) in the emergency department (ED) confirmed with COVID-19 to date. In EDs, HCPs must be careful about contagious respiratory agents not only from direct patient contact but also potential viral shedding from other members. Cross-contamination among coworkers in the ED can occur through various methods and occasionally poses a bigger threat compared to patient examination [1, 2]. Droplet transmission can take place in the working environment and rest area. At Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, a medical center in Taiwan with previous experience of a hospital cluster outbreak of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic in 2003 [3], we had developed preventive strategies following detailed steps to control cross-infection of COVID-19 for frontline HCPs in the ED. 1. TOCC self-screening questionnaire: HCPs should assess and record their own symptoms and travel, contact, and cluster histories into the websites every week before starting work. This article is part of the Topical Collection on Systems-Level Quality Improvement * I-Min Chiu [email protected]; [email protected] 1

Department of Emergency Medicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, No. 123, Dapi Rd. Niaosong Dist, Kaohsiung City 83301, Taiwan

2

Department of Computer Science and Engineering, National Sun Yet-Sen University, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan

2. Regular body temperature monitoring: Body temperature checkpoints should be set at every entrance of the ED. Further, every HCP should record his/her own temperature into the hospital record system every day. 3. Complete personal protective equipment (PPE): Every first-line clinical HCP should wear PPE, including helmets, gloves, face shields, and N95 masks, before entering ED. 4. Outdoor ED triage and isolated waiting room: Outdoor COVID-19-specific clinics with isolated testing equipment and waiting room should be set-up for separating other ED patients without specific symptoms or a TOCC history from those suspected with the COVID-19 infection. Showering rooms outside the isolated clinics should also be set-up for HCPs to be used after the duty. 5. Separating the work and rest areas: As shown in fig. 1, for the designated HCPs in charge of suspected COVID19 patients, not only isolated clinics but also independent rest areas should be planned for preventing possible transmission among colleagues. Even in the same rest area, employees should maintain a 2-m distance from each other while dining