Clinical Ophthalmology (Apr 2022)
Evaluation of Urgent Retinal Practice and Safety Measures for Physicians and Patients During COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
Ahmed Roshdy Alagorie, Osama A Sorour, Hesham Eltoukhy, Elsayed Nassar Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University, Tanta, EgyptCorrespondence: Ahmed Roshdy Alagorie, Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University, Tanta, Egypt, Email [email protected]: To assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on urgent retina practice and factors influencing adherence of physicians and patients to safety measures.Methods: In this clinical audit, urgent or emergent vitreoretinal surgical disorders that presented to our hospital during the period of 15th March– 15th May 2020 were compared with the period just before the pandemic declaration (15th December 2019– 15th February 2020). Additionally, two questionnaires assessing the adherence to safety measures were circulated to the medical personnel and a sample of patients. The collected data were analyzed, and accordingly, recommendations were proposed to the hospital administration and specific corrective measures were applied. The outcome of applying these corrective measures was assessed in the re-audit cycle during the period of 15th June– 15th August 2020.Results: There was a significant decrease in the number of urgent or emergent vitreoretinal surgical disorders that presented to our hospital during the pandemic (161 versus 302 cases in a similar period before the pandemic; p = 0.022). Just with the pandemic recession, there was a significant increase in the number of urgent cases (391 versus 161 cases during the pandemic; p = 0.006), also there was an increased number of complex cases. Residents and fellows were less compliant than attending physicians in adherence to safety measures.Conclusion: Delayed presentation of urgent retinal cases during the pandemic highlights the importance of public awareness of urgent conditions that need immediate medical or surgical care. Attention to young physicians during the pandemic is crucial as they are less adherent to safety measures due to work overload.Keywords: COVID-19, retina practice, audit