This week, Harvard and EdX, the virtual learning platform founded by Harvard and MIT, announced the launch of a free online course
designed to train frontline medical professionals to operate the
mechanical ventilators needed to treat COVID-19 patients. The class was
developed by Susan Wilcox, the division chief of critical care at
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and an associate professor of
emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School, and Thomas Piraino,
clinical specialist for mechanical ventilation for the Centre of
Excellence in Mechanical Ventilation at St. Michael’s Hospital in
Toronto. The Gazette spoke with Wilcox about the genesis of her project
and how it will work.
GAZETTE: Clearly there’s a need for this kind of course now, as
more and more medical professionals are called to help battle the
COVID-19 pandemic. Is that what motivated you to put this course
together?
WILCOX: I’ve been interested in teaching mechanical ventilation to
groups that historically have not managed it for years. The principles
are relatively straightforward, but mechanical ventilation is actually
one of the most important things that we do when we’re taking care of
critically ill patients. I’ve long thought that if we could encourage
people to be more invested in managing ventilated patients, we could
improve outcomes. I wrote a textbook about mechanical ventilation with a
couple of colleagues from the Emergency Department a couple of years
ago now, and with COVID-19 becoming a ventilator crisis, I distributed a
version of that text widely on the internet. I was approached then by
[the philanthropic organization] Schmidt Futures, which was looking to
create a course on mechanical ventilation education for the masses, and
they wanted to know if I wanted to collaborate. So, I can’t take credit
for having the idea of creating the course: They came to me.
GAZETTE: How were you able to create this so quickly?
WILCOX: Normally, we’d spend three to six months putting together a
course like this, but obviously, with the rapid spread of COVID-19, we
don’t have that kind of time. As we move forward, we look forward to
continuing to improve the course based on feedback from participants,
and also as we learn more about this novel coronavirus.
GAZETTE: We’ve heard a lot about the need for ventilators to treat
many of those individuals who are hospitalized with COVID-19. Why are
these machines so important in battling this pandemic?
WILCOX: The predominant pathology of COVID-19 really seems to be
profound respiratory failure. Patients are coming in with extremely low oxygen levels,
and it’s clear that either the virus or the immune response to the
virus is causing significant damage to portions of the lung and causing
the little blood vessels inside the lung to be damaged. To treat that,
we have to make sure that we give people sufficient support until their
bodies are able to heal and fight the virus off. The good news about
this is that, as is the case with most other critically ill patients who
come to us with respiratory failure, low tidal volume, low-pressure
ventilation does seem to be the best way to protect these patients’
lungs and give them the time they need to fight the virus off.
GAZETTE: How long do most patients need to be on them?
WILCOX: We are recognizing that it takes a really long time to defeat
COVID-19; that the patients who are on the ventilators are requiring 10
to 14 days. Every disease is different, but we usually think of four to
five days on ventilators as being a common length for many of the
conditions that we see.
GAZETTE: Is that part of the reason why many communities seem to be experiencing a shortage of equipment during this pandemic?
WILCOX: I’m very confident in the care that we can provide at MGH. We
are lucky in that we still have the resources to be able to serve the
growing number of patients we see with this virus every day, and this
number is definitely growing, day to day. And yes, what we need as a
health care community is time. This is exactly the concept behind the
flatten-the-curve initiative. Even if we have the same number of
patients over the course of the entire pandemic, as long as we can
prevent the health care system from being overwhelmed at various points
throughout, I’m optimistic we can get many patients through this.
GAZETTE: Who is normally trained to use these machines, and who is using them now?
WILCOX: Normally, the people who manage mechanically ventilated
patients are predominantly intensivists, or physicians who have done
additional specific training in critical-care medicine. These doctors
work in close collaboration with respiratory therapists, who are highly
trained medical professionals who focus very specifically on taking care
of patients with respiratory disorders. Traditionally, an intensivist
and a respiratory therapist will collaborate on providing care to
mechanically ventilated patients. And while a lot of doctors may get
exposure to taking care of ventilated patients during their residencies,
these experiences are usually fairly brief. If they don’t go on to
specialize in critical care or anesthesiology, they’re unlikely to have
seen a mechanically ventilated patient in quite some time. Even in the
Emergency Department, while emergency physicians frequently intubate
patients and put them on the ventilator, the in-depth management of the
ventilator has not traditionally been a large focus of Emergency
Medicine practice.
GAZETTE: How are things changing in emergency rooms and
intensive-care units across the country with regard to who is providing
care with ventilators?
WILCOX: The rising numbers of individuals we’re seeing with COVID-19
means that we now must bring in nurses and physicians who are highly
trained in other areas to take care of ventilated patients. We’re
fortunate that at MGH, we’re still able to, for now, have these nurses
and physicians collaborate with those medical professionals who provide
care through mechanical ventilation on a frequent basis. Of course, it
certainly behooves these medical professionals to have some working
understanding of mechanical ventilation going in, and that is part of
the impetus behind creating this course.
GAZETTE: Tell us more about the course itself.
WILCOX: It’s important to say that first off that it’s not going to
turn anyone into an intensivist or a respiratory therapist; it’s rather
to give people foundational knowledge to be able to collaborate with one
of these medical professionals
who regularly works with mechanical ventilation. The course is made up
of 10 different sections. It begins with the basics—an intro to the
physiology of mechanically ventilated patients and to the ventilator in
and of itself. It then moves into more advanced topics that go into
in-depth rationale of what we do with the ventilator, while providing
particular scenarios that could occur. We cover topics like management
of acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS, which is the major
pathophysiology behind COVID-19. And we have a specific COVID-19 module,
which covers mostly mechanical ventilation, but also other medical
management of the condition. Each course is made up of 12 to 20 minutes
of video depending on content, along with more in-depth readings. The
video is fairly dynamic, with lots of illustrations and graphics to
drive home points and to emphasize clinical decision-making. The
writings get more into theory and in-depth background for learners who
want to more fully understand the concepts.
GAZETTE: You said that you hope to continue to improve the course
as you move forward. Can you explain more about your vision for doing
this?
WILCOX: Normally, when we talk about research and studying medical
conditions, it’s a many-months-to-many-years process. We will do studies
that go through peer review, and we make sure we have all of our facts
straight before anything gets published. Clearly with the rapid pace of
this pandemic, that’s just not practical. We need to get information to
people as quickly as we can. Some of the controversies right now with
regard to mechanical ventilation
and COVID-19 involve exactly when we should be putting people on the
ventilators, as well as some of the details on how we should be
optimizing these machines for patients. Since we’ve only seen patients
with COVID-19 for about three weeks now in earnest at the time of this
interview, we only have three weeks of data. In terms of the medical
literature that’s nothing, so we’re doing the very best we can for all
of these patients. With time we are going to better understand how we
can improve their care, and we want to be able to communicate these
learnings to those individuals who are taking this class.
GAZETTE: What have your days been like over the past few weeks?
WILCOX: I’m in a similar position to so many of my colleagues. We go
to the hospital and see the hospital full of critically ill patients,
and we work really hard to resuscitate all of them and give them the
best care that we can. Then we all come home and then we go right back
to work trying to read what our colleagues are publishing about this
condition, or trying to write new protocols so we can stay up to date
with the best literature. Many of us are finding we have extremely long
workdays just trying to keep up with everything that’s going on. I’m not
complaining; I’m very glad to be able to help. It’s just the reality of
these times. We’re lucky to have so many people working really hard to
battle this pandemic on every front.
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-04-online-medical-pros-mechanical-ventilators.html
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