Early vascular surgery response to the COVID-19 pandemic: Results of a nationwide survey
Autor
Latz, Christopher A.
Boitano, Laura T.
Png, Maximilian
Dua, Anahita
Institución
Resumen
Objective: The COVID-19 pandemic has had major implications for the United States health care system. This survey
study sought to identify practice changes, to understand current personal protective equipment (PPE) use, and to
determine how caring for patients with COVID-19 differs for vascular surgeons practicing in states with high COVID-19
case numbers vs in states with low case numbers.
Methods: A 14-question online survey regarding the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on vascular surgeons’ current
practice was sent to 365 vascular surgeons across the country through REDCap from April 14 to April 21, 2020, with responses closed on April 23, 2020. The survey response was analyzed with descriptive statistics. Further analyses were
performed to evaluate whether responses from states with the highest number of COVID-19 cases (New York, New Jersey,
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and California) differed from those with lower case numbers (all other states).
Results: A total of 121 vascular surgeons responded (30.6%) to the survey. All high-volume states were represented. The
majority of vascular surgeons are reusing PPE. The majority of respondents worked in an academic setting (81.5%) and
were performing only urgent and emergent cases (80.5%) during preparation for the surge. This did not differ between
states with high and low COVID-19 case volumes (P ¼ .285). States with high case volume were less likely to perform a
lower extremity intervention for critical limb ischemia (60.8% vs 77.5%; P ¼ .046), but otherwise case types did not differ.
Most attending vascular surgeons worked with residents (90.8%) and limited their exposure to procedures on suspected
or confirmed COVID-19 cases (56.0%). Thirty-eight percent of attending vascular surgeons have been redeployed within
the hospital to a vascular access service or other service outside of vascular surgery. This was more frequent in states with
high case volume compared with low case volume (P ¼ .039). The majority of vascular surgeons are reusing PPE (71.4%)
and N95 masks (86.4%), and 21% of vascular surgeons think that they do not have adequate PPE to perform their clinical
duties.
Conclusions: The initial response to the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in reduced elective cases, with primarily only
urgent and emergent cases being performed. A minority of vascular surgeons have been redeployed outside of their
specialty; however, this is more common among states with high case numbers. Adequate PPE remains an issue for
almost a quarter of vascular surgeons who responded to this survey. (J Vasc Surg 2020;-:1-9.)