Clinical strategies for optimizing infusion center care through a pandemic

Author:

Hanna Kirollos S12ORCID,Segal Eve M3,Barlow Ashley4,Barlow Brooke5

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, USA

2. M Health Fairview, Maple Grove, USA

3. Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, USA

4. University of Maryland, Baltimore, USA

5. University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA

Abstract

The national pandemic resulting from the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, has made the delivery of care for patients with cancer a challenge. There are competing risks of mortality from cancer versus serious complications and higher risk of death from COVID-19 in immunocompromised hosts. Furthermore, compounding these concerns is the inadequate supply of personal protective equipment, decreased hospital capacity, and paucity of effective treatments or vaccines to date for COVID-19. Guidance measures and recommendations have been published by national organizations aiming to facilitate the delivery of care in a safe and effective manner, many of which, are permanently adoptable interventions. Given the critical importance to continue chemotherapy, there remains additional interventions to further enhance patient safety while conserving healthcare resources such as adjustments in medication administration, reduction in laboratory or drug monitoring, and home delivery of specialty infusions. In this manuscript, we outline how to implement these actionable interventions of chemotherapy and supportive care delivery to further enhance the current precautionary measures while maintaining safe and effective patient care. Coupled with current published standards, these strategies can help alleviate the numerous challenges associated with this pandemic.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Oncology

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