The rapid spread of a virus, never seen before and poorly understood, is a worst-case
scenario that requires healthcare to work across a range of organizational, treatment,
and operational borders to contain it. Telemedicine’s role during the current coronavirus
pandemic remains two-fold: to connect clinicians with patients and to support frontline
bedside teams, each accomplished regardless of location. The challenge of the pandemic
highlights specific areas in which tele-ICU is built to be the future of critical
care: leveraging technology to connect ICU experts to patients in need, applying national
best practice protocols in tailored treatment plans, managing ventilators at a high
level, responding instantly to advanced cardiac life support needs with situational
awareness, and providing the flexibility to innovate to address new needs as they
arise.
The standard of critical care within the medical community is facing a transformation
that will evolve not within generations or years but in months or weeks. Trained with
a particular set of skills, critical care physicians are prepared for high-intensity
life or death situations and urgent treatment to avoid further patient deterioration.
Part of this training is the study of the past to prepare for the future. When there
is no past, as with the coronavirus, intensivists must quickly adapt to the immediate
needs of patients. Tele-ICU deployed at scale is unique in that it connects a team
of highly trained critical care specialists with ICUs across the country, ensuring
the gold standard of care to a greater number of patients while enabling rapid learning.
Protocol
As a large provider of tele-ICU critical care currently caring for patients in 25
states, Advanced ICU Care is uniquely positioned among clinical providers to develop
and share best practices for care during the COVID-19 crisis. A network of nearly
100 partner hospitals nationwide enables us to operate in a large, collaborative system
in caring for more than 80,000 patients a year. This provides the ability to also
develop and share local learnings and best practices. Our protocols for the care of
COVID-19 patients are informed by cases and situations from several of the US epicenters,
first hand experiences of our clinicians in conjunction with the bedside teams at
our partner hospitals as well as data from the first cases shared out of Wuhan China.
One of the disproportionate impacts of COVID-19 that has been widely reported has
been its effect on the geriatric population (1). This trend is being seen across the
US as well. As such it is important to recognize the comorbidities of the geriatric
population along with the geriatric syndromes most commonly associated with the aging
population. These are reflected in existing and developing protocols.
Table 1
Age Cohort Distribution of Suspected COVID-19 Patients (Advanced ICU Care through
mid-April, 2020. n = 1790)
Age Cohort
Suspected COVID-19 Cases
US Population
0–10
0.3%
14.12%
11–19
2.2%
14%
20–29
4.0%
14%
30–39
7.6%
15%
40–49
17.8%
15%
50–59
17.8%
11%
60–69
26.4%
7%
70–79
27.1%
6%
80+
14.7%
3%
Ventilation Management
During a typical influenza season, ICUs will see an influx of patients with nearly
30% requiring intubation. This does not include non-invasive ventilation (2) and other
forms of oxygenation, which are generally preferred so long as they are effective.
After studying the earliest cases of COVID-19 seen in Wuhan it has become increasingly
clear that the use of noninvasive ventilation in treating COVID-19 was associated
with deterioration to invasive ventilation while placing healthcare workers at increased
risk of becoming infected (3), as the procedure can enable the virus to be aerosolized
which can facilitate the further spread of the disease. The significant increase in
intubated patients who require additional monitoring and management can overwhelm
an already task-saturated bedside team.
Ventilation management is a core competency of all intensivists. Understanding how
to properly utilize a ventilator takes time to learn and knowing how to increase oxygenation
levels appropriately becomes as much art as it is science. This is one of the many
areas where tele-ICU support can make a significant difference. A critical care specialist
with years of training and experience is able to virtually enter the room with a bedside
nurse, respiratory therapist (RT), or provider and walk them through various modes
and methods of ventilation, providing real-time support while evaluating for the patient’s
response to vent changes. After being placed on a ventilator, patients can be assigned
to a tele-ICU Respiratory Therapist (RT) who safely performs virtual rounds using
high-definition audio/visual equipment, gathering information and providing a constant
and clear flow of that information to ensure appropriate patient vent management with
minimal virus exposure for bedside clinicians.
Advanced Cardiac Life-Support
Tele-ICU can be a significant benefit to a hospital team during an Advanced Cardiac
Life Support situation (“code”). As time is of the essence, the ability to deliver
an intensivist to the room via A/V technology within seconds, much sooner than a bedside
provider might be able to get there, can initiate life-saving treatments when seconds
matter. Typically, running a code involves an “all hands on deck” approach, with care
team members running into the room to be led in response by an on-site physician.
When faced with the realities of COVID-19 patient isolation and PPE requirements,
code leadership by a tele-ICU intensivist has allowed the number of staff responding
on-site to be reduced to essential personnel only. The teleintensivist provides the
bedside clinicians with an additional set of eyes as well as a clinician that is removed
from the inherent chaos of the situation. An Intensivist’s experience can provide
needed expertise and leadership during this critical time.
Isolation Requires Reinvention
With patients isolated on such a grand scale due to COVID-19, we are finding new clinical
considerations that tele-ICU adapts to address them. Paramount among these is a widely-observed
increase in patient loneliness, as clinicians are strapped for time, slowed by the
need to don personal protective equipment (PPE), and dissuaded by frequent patient
visits due to the risk of virus exposure. Beyond providing clinical expertise and
24/7 monitoring, tele-ICU stands with the bedside team as first line of care for patients.
As the pandemic spreads in the U.S., we quickly worked with client teams and technology
suppliers to enable local use of the tele-ICU A/V equipment. Access that had been
utilized by tele-ICU clinicians is now being shared with physicians and nurses within
the hospital to visit patients virtually to decrease the frequency and need to physically
enter an isolation room. Collaboration between tele-ICU and bedside teams has helped
to minimize the use of PPE and limit unnecessary exposure of the bedside team to the
contagious virus. Tele-ICU nurse practitioners have increased their video check-ins
to provide additional support to the patients and provide human connection and emotional
support to patients during a time of significant stress. Even hospital chaplains,
social workers, and housekeeping have leveraged the tele-ICU technology to provide
essential services to patients while maintaining minimal physical contact. Standard
workflows are being modified to make room for more physician to physician conversations
and consultations and adjusting to the immediate needs that are arising during the
outbreak while providing best practices to help stem the tide of this wave.
There will be many lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic that will inform the
future of medicine. Telemedicine and particularly tele-ICU were built for this challenge
and will play a significant role in creating a new model of care for years to come.