Recommendation from Peking Union Medical College Hospital for urgent hemodialysis during the COVID-19 pandemic

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NEPHROLOGY - LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Recommendation from Peking Union Medical College Hospital for urgent hemodialysis during the COVID‑19 pandemic Gang Chen1 · Rongrong Hu1 · Ying Wang1 · Xue Zhao1 · Yangzhong Zhou1 · Dan Song1 · Jinghua Xia1 · Yan Qin1 · Limeng Chen1 · Xuemei Li1 Received: 19 May 2020 / Accepted: 1 June 2020 © Springer Nature B.V. 2020

Editor, Until now, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has resulted in more than 5 million confirmed cases, and the World Health Organization (WHO) has announced it as a global pandemic [1, 2]. Infection prevention in the hemodialysis center of a general hospital is complicated by the monitoring of long-term dialysis patients, as well as the inevitable occurrence of emerging dialysis from wards or emergency room. Concordant with suggestions from the WHO, and based on real-world practice during the COVID-19 outbreak, we implemented a safe and efficient workflow to screen and manage patients who need urgent dialysis in Peking Union Medical College Hospital (PUMCH), a leading hospital in mainland China.

Organizing the protection Based on environmental exposure degree, areas in PUMCH were classified as low risk, medium risk, high risk, and extremely high risk. The hemodialysis staff was required to wear the matched personal protective equipment (PPE) when a cross-area moving is needed. For example, the attending consultants should wear N95 masks, protective glasses, as well as suite up protective clothing and shoe covers, when they enter the extremely high-risk area such as the fever clinic. In addition, they should leave the contaminated PPE * Limeng Chen [email protected] * Xuemei Li [email protected] 1



Department of Nephrology, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College, Chinese Academy of Medical Science, Beijing 100730, China

before they move back to lower risk zones. The staff maintains the same protective gear when they move towards areas with equal risks. Hand sanitizer was required whenever staff entered the hemodialysis center.

Symptom screening and dialysis arrangement For the referred patients, we strictly analyze the indications for urgent dialysis. We recommended peritoneal dialysis and encourage catheter placement for patients with looming dialysis, but not urgent hemodialysis. For the inevitable urgent hemodialysis patients, we first collect their contact history, the temperature for the past 14 days, and potential suspicious symptoms and then implemented the corresponding process (Fig. 1). We cooperate with the in-hospital Expert Group, which consists of specialists from the departments of infectious disease, respiratory, intensive care, and emergency medicine. We test SARS-CoV-2 swab for patients with suspicious contact, fever, respiratory symptoms, or chest imaging abnormalities. Patients with positive reading will be sent to the designated hospitals. We accept patients with negative swab readings but arrange separate dialysis during an observation period of 14 days. We also carefully monitor temperature for all conta