Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2020)

All India Ophthalmological Society – Indian Journal of Ophthalmology consensus statement on preferred practices during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Sabyasachi Sengupta,
  • Santosh G Honavar,
  • Mahipal S Sachdev,
  • Namrata Sharma,
  • Atul Kumar,
  • Jagat Ram,
  • Rohit Shetty,
  • Girish S Rao,
  • Kim Ramasamy,
  • Rohit Khanna,
  • Elesh Jain,
  • Kasturi Bhattacharjee,
  • Ashvin Agarwal,
  • S Natarajan,
  • Tatyarao P Lahane,
  • Writing Committee on behalf of the All India Ophthalmological Society - Indian Journal of Ophthalmology Expert Group for COVID-19 Practice Guidelines

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijo.IJO_871_20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 5
pp. 711 – 724

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic has taken tragic proportions and has disrupted lives globally. In the wake of governmental lockdowns, ophthalmologists need practical and actionable guidelines based on advisories from national health departments on how to conduct their duties during nationwide lockdowns and after these are lifted. In this paper, we present a preferred practice pattern (PPP) based on consensus discussions between leading ophthalmologists and health care professionals in India including representatives from major governmental and private institutions as well as the All India Ophthalmological Society leadership. In this document, the expert panel clearly defines the range of activities for Indian ophthalmologists during the ongoing lockdown phase and precautions to be taken once the lockdown is lifted. Guidelines for triage, governmental guidelines for use of personal protective equipment from ophthalmologists' point of view, precautions to be taken in the OPD and operating room as well as care of various ophthalmic equipment have been described in detail. These guidelines will be applicable to all practice settings including tertiary institutions, corporate and group practices and individual eye clinics and should help Indian ophthalmologists in performing their professional responsibilities without being foci of disease transmission.

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