Population Health Strategies to Support Hospital and Intensive Care Unit Resiliency During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Italian Experience
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
Italy was one of the countries most affected by the number of people infected and dead during the first
COVID-19 wave. The authors describe the rapid rollout of a population health clinical and organizational
response in preparedness and capabilities to support the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Italian
province of Modena. The authors review the processes, the challenges faced, and describe how excess demand
for hospital services was successfully mitigated and thus overwhelming the healthcare services avoided the
collapse of the local health care system. An analysis of bed occupancy in the region predicted during the first
weeks of the epidemic. The SEIR model estimated the number of infected people under different containment
measures. Community resources were mobilized to reduce provincial hospitals' burden of care. A population
health approach, based on a radical reorganization of the workflow and emergency patient management, was
implemented. The bed saturation of the Modena Healthcare Agency was measured by an ad hoc, newly
implemented intensive care unit (ICU) bed occupancy and COVID-19 centralized governance dashboard. ICU
bed occupancy increased by 114%, avoiding saturation of the Modena Healthcare Agency system. The EmiliaRomagna region achieved a higher rate of ICU bed availability at 2.15 ICU beds per 10,000 inhabitants as
compared with community 1 ICU bed availability prior to the pandemic. Rapid and radical local reorganization
of regional efforts helped inform the successful development and impleme
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
: COVID-19; intensive care units; community engagement; epidemic; public health strategies; health care management
List of contributors:
Luca', Rossella
Published in: