Resetting Healthcare Post-COVID-19 Pandemic: The Patient Handbook
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About this ebook
That statistic comes from Dr. Sanjay Prasad, a practicing surgeon of nearly 30 years.
"The COVID-19 pandemic has destabilized the entire healthcare system and changed how doctors practice and how patients receive care. We can no longer afford to blindly follow the recommendations of doctors, friends, advertisements, or online ratings to make what are often the most important decisions in our lives," he says.
So what do you do? In this easy-to-ready guide, Dr. Prasad provides the information that YOU need to take charge of your healthcare. Learn:
How to make reasonable and informed decisions about your healthcare
The differences between teaching vs. private hospitals
How to evaluate surgeons
The breakthrough technology provided by SurgiQuality.
How to control the costs of your medical procedures
Everyone at some point in their lives will need to consult a doctor or surgeon. Read this book and take charge of your healthcare now.
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Resetting Healthcare Post-COVID-19 Pandemic - Sanjay Prasad
INTRODUCTION
Remember when MRSA made headline news? Unlike other easily treatable infections, MRSA (short for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) came right out of a sci-fi horror film. Reports described how the virulent superbug rapidly genetically mutated, deeming traditional antibiotics powerless against it. The results were painful, deep abscesses that could turn into life-threatening conditions affecting the blood, lungs, heart, bones, and joints. Patients caught MRSA in hospitals, nursing homes, and other healthcare facilities. Suddenly, these otherwise safe spaces seemed like patient danger zones.
To make matters worse, there was MRSA’s nefarious twin. You could catch community-associated MRSA practically anywhere. Now healthy high school athletes during routine practice, childcare workers at schools, and those living in crowded spaces were at risk. Combined, the two MRSAs transformed healing and health settings—like hospitals and gyms—into scary places. But that was pre-pandemic.
In terms of media attention, the MRSA siblings were quickly tossed into the who cares?
trash bin once reports emerged of a serious illness emerging from a Chinese city in late 2019. Within months, MRSA seemed downright minor compared to what was to come. (Meanwhile, it’s not as if MRSA has ceased to be a serious health threat.)
As the rest of the world celebrated the New Year in 2020, Wuhan was ground zero of a troubling bug that attacked the respiratory system. While the news of the coronavirus consumed headlines across the globe, most of those living outside China witnessed the tragedy unfolding as they would any sad catastrophe, such as a massive earthquake, a destructive hurricane, or a large-scale civil unrest, taking place in a distant country.
For those of us outside Wuhan, life went on as usual, with little to distinguish the end of 2019 from the beginning of 2020. But within months, an illness that China seemed to be effectively containing within its massive borders through austere confinement measures, which seemed possible only in an authoritarian regime, began spreading to other countries. One by one, and in rapid succession, the populations of nations outside China were being infected by coronavirus, resulting in the disease the mainstream media was now officially calling COVID-19.
From Madrid to Manhattan, what was thought to be isolated to China was now on a warpath ripping through the Western World. Unprecedented lockdowns closed the borders of countries that prided themselves on democratic fundamentals like freedom of movement and put cities that were the epicenters of economic activity into immediate and aggressive sleep mode.
In the United States, the earliest cases were narrowed down to a nursing home in Seattle. This spelled early disaster for its residents because, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), people over sixty years old had a significantly higher risk of coming down with a severe case of COVID-19 than their younger counterparts. From there the cases spread throughout the tech-heavy city.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, another tragedy was unfolding. New York City, Europe’s gateway to the United States, was hit hard by an Old World coronavirus strain that spread through untracked transmissions. The Big Apple patients with COVID-19 symptoms flooded the city’s already strained ICUs, resulting in draconian lockdown measures unseen in any other part of the country.
The virus’s primary transmission mode—the exchange of respiratory droplets—combined with images of crowded ICUs, body bags piled into morgues, and patients on ventilators made the virus fodder for fearful public speculation.
Those around us who looked fine could be asymptomatic carriers. And children, thought to be safe from the virus, were coming down with a new pediatric multi-organ inflammatory syndrome that shared attributes with Kawasaki disease and toxic-shock syndrome.
Treatment of those with symptoms was complicated. Many with manageable cases of coronavirus were encouraged to recover at home in order to leave hospital beds open for those in worse shape.
Multiple reasons explain why coronavirus is more virulent than other viruses like the seasonal flu. Some patients with severe COVID-19 have experienced blood clotting. The disease may also excite the immune system, causing a cytokine storm where immune cells enter the bloodstream and attack the lungs. And in the most extreme cases, mechanical ventilation and lung bypass machines, called ECMO (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) are used. Sadly, those who were put on ECMO had a high likelihood of not surviving.
While measures to slow the disease’s spread gave healthcare professionals time to develop new treatments that saved lives, what the public was waiting for was the vaccine. An unprecedented global race was underway.
Then a miracle happened. Several vaccines were developed that showed exceptional anti-COVID-19 immune responses in all participants, thanks largely to one of the world’s fastest and most aggressive mass-vaccination campaigns, nicknamed Operation Warp Speed (OWS). The hope was that OWS, along with continued masking whenever possible, would bring us to herd immunity. Although there is still concern for resistant mutant strains, we appear to be finally emerging from the deadly plague. However, a recurrence of the virus in the future is a high probability and may be around for some time.
The virus affects patients directly and indirectly, short-term and-long term. For direct effects, many people who have survived severe COVID-19 have suffered lung, heart, and neurological damage, as well as mental health traumas. And some patients are at higher risk of stroke. Then there are the indirect effects. Topping this list are the long-term needs of those whose elective surgeries have been postponed. This category of surgery includes lifesaving procedures that, as a result of widespread lockdowns, were postponed. For those who require treatment most, this delay posed a grave threat to their long-term well-being.
Patients across the country seek solutions to meet their needs under healthcare’s new normal. In the following chapters, you’ll learn about a breakthrough approach to addressing patients’ most pressing medical needs.
CHAPTER 1
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WHAT IS ELECTIVE SURGERY?
In early 2020, news was changing as fast around the globe as ICUs were filling up in Lombardy, Madrid, and New York. Within weeks of the infection’s spread outside of China, everything and everyone became suspect of transmitting coronavirus: Can I get it from riding a bike near another cyclist or just walking down the street? Does it live on the cardboard boxes I’m receiving from Amazon? Are hugs from close family members unsafe?
Seemingly overnight, words such as social distancing and asymptomatic carrier entered the common lexicon. Masks, which in countries like ours that eschewed them in the past, were now as mandatory as wearing clothes when going out. Throughout the United States, hospitals and other medical facilities were ordered to cancel or delay nonessential elective surgeries.
What Is Elective Surgery?
Before explaining what it is, let’s differentiate elective surgery from urgent and emergency surgeries. As these names describe, they are operations performed as a result of an urgent or emergency medical condition. Simply put, emergency surgeries treat ruptures or leaks. They must be performed immediately to avoid permanent disability or death. Or they may be able to be performed as soon as the patient is medically stable. Patients who are involved in major accidents or have acute appendicitis are examples of those who would experience some kind of rupture or leak and therefore undergo emergency surgery.
Meanwhile, elective surgeries are ones that can be scheduled in advance. In this regard, many in the public consider them less important than their urgent or emergency counterparts. They associate them with nose jobs, tummy tucks, and laser hair removal. But elective doesn’t necessarily mean optional. While some elective procedures are less important, such as cosmetic surgery, others treat life-threatening conditions such as cancer, clogged arteries, colon infections, diverticulitis, and brain aneurisms.
Thus to shed this class of surgery from being associated with mainly cosmetic procedures, I refer to them as non-urgent surgeries, rather than elective surgeries, throughout this book.
In the United States, non-urgent procedures far outweigh emergency surgeries. The emergency-to-non-urgent surgery ratio is the number of emergency surgeries per one-hundred non-urgent surgeries. Using data gathered from 2006 to 2016, in the United States, 91.4 percent of all surgeries were non-urgent. Meanwhile, 8.6 percent of all surgeries were urgent during that period. What is the surgical bottom line?
The total annual cost of all surgery in the United States is difficult to determine for multiple reasons, primarily because surgical costs are often lumped together with medical costs.
I estimate that in 2019, all surgical costs hovered around seven hundred billion dollars. Given the importance of non-urgent surgeries and the amount spent