During this pandemic, it has been come apparent that the NHS will not be able to push as many patients through their facilities like they used to. This is to do with creating the space for people to socially distance. To address this, the government have essentially rented space in local private hospitals to increase the number of patients we can see and operate on. The Newcastle Nuffield Hospital have been very accommodating and offer excellent facilities in the out patient department and theatres.
There are strict rules for seeing patients and stricter rules when going for surgery. Out patient attendance is possible at the Royal Victoria Infirmary and the Newcastle Nuffield Hospital after a risk assessment is made. Hospitals do not want to see patients with a high temperature, a new continuous cough or those who have recently lost their sense of taste or smell (all symptoms of Covid 19).
For patients who have routine, non-sight threatening conditions like cataracts, they need to meet the following criteria:
1. They must not have any symptoms of Covid 19 within the last 14 days
2. They must have not been in close contact with anyone who is suspected or proven to have Covid 19
Patients who are listed for surgery must self isolate /shield for 14 days prior to surgery and attend for a SARS CoV2 swab test around 72 hours prior to their operation. This is to confirm that they have not got Covid 19. Should they develop symptoms of Covid 19 or a positive swab test, their surgery will have to be deferred.
These strict rules are designed to make the hospital environment as save and Coronavirus free as possible. Despite these strict rules, I managed to operate on 21 cataracts this week, 2 tumour reconstructions, 1 dacryocystorhinostomy and a couple of lid malposition repairs!
It is particularly important to keep Coronavirus away from patients who require a general anaesthetic. General anaesthesia (but not local anaesthesia, which is how we do all our cataracts and most of our lid and tumour work) greatly increases the seriousness of Covid 19.
As mentioned in my last blog, the death rate from Covid 19 rises with increasing age. What is somewhat surprising, is that a general anaesthetic greatly increases the death rate from Covid 19 if you catch it around the time of your surgery. Regardless of age, the anaesthetists quote that the chance of dying from Covid 19 is 1 in 5, if you catch it around the time of surgery. This of course means we currently avoid general anaesthesia, unless absolutely necessary.