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Tips for keeping your practice safe and mitigating the spread of COVID-19

Article

These three strategies can minimize the risks for both patients and staff.

tips for keeping your waiting room virus free

Doctor’s office waiting rooms are busy places. It is estimated that there are 883.7 million ambulatory care visits a year in the U.S., with 54.5 percent of these visits going to primary care physicians. With an average wait time of 18 minutes and 13 seconds from arrival until a patient is seen by the provider, there is ample time for the mingling of patients who have an acute infectious disease and those who do not.

Studies have shown that airborne infections pose a particular threat to susceptible individuals whenever they are placed together with an infected individual in confined spaces like a healthcare facility waiting area. In pediatric offices, it has been found that there is a spike in influenza-like respiratory illnesses two weeks after a visit for a well child visit. Additionally, it has been found that surfaces in doctors’ offices are highly contaminated, with bacterial counts that frequently exceed counts observed on surfaces in the in-patient settings. Furniture, magazines, and toys in doctors’ offices have been found to carry the highest bacterial burden. 

According to the CDC, the Coronavirus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic sweeping across the world is an RNA virus thought to spread mainly between people who are in close contact with one another (within about six feet) through respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs or sneezes. It may be possible that a person can contract COVID-19 by touching a surface or object that has the virus on it and then touching their own mouth, nose, or possibly their eyes, but this is not thought to be the main way the virus spreads. These patterns of transmission raise the concern that healthcare facility waiting areas are environments in which there is risk of transmission of COVID-19 to high-risk uninfected patients.

There are many steps that a practice can take to mitigate this risk. In broad terms, these measures fall into three categories: Changes to the waiting room physical space, changes to patient flow, and changes to care utilization patterns.

Deep cleaning and seating arrangement

During the COVID-19 pandemic, emphasis needs to be placed on deep cleaning of the physician office waiting rooms, including all frequently touched surfaces such as the reception counters, check in kiosks and iPad screens, waiting area chairs, elevator buttons, door handles and railings. It might be necessary to remove toys and magazines from the waiting room until the pandemic is over.

It is also recommended that, where possible, the waiting room chairs are arranged in a manner that is conducive to patients maintaining at least six feet of distance from other patients. There have been some recommendations regarding the use of HEPA filters. Unfortunately, since the Coronavirus is very small (0.1 of a micron), it is likely not filtered by usual commercially available HEPA filters, which are only able to filter particles as small as 0.3 microns.

Patient flow pattern

Patient flow is an area where much can be done to mitigate the risk for spread of COVID-19 in the waiting room. Healthcare organizations with multiple locations have chosen to designate certain offices to solely seeing patients with suspected COVID-19, designating other offices to see patients for ongoing chronic and acute non COVID-19 issues. This separation reduces the likelihood of patients with respiratory infectious symptoms sharing the waiting room with others. If multiple locations are not available, this separation can be done with designating certain times of day on particular days for older at-risk noninfectious patient appointments. Some practices have completely closed their waiting rooms, inviting patients to wait in their cars in the parking lot until they receive a text when the exam room is available for them, obviating the need for any joint time in the waiting room.

Implement telehealth visits

Lastly, care utilization patterns can be changed by implementing telehealth visits. Patients with COVID-19 could be evaluated remotely, avoiding the risk of contagion for the office staff and providers. Those deemed seriously ill could be referred to the emergency department with prior notification of their arrival.

Additionally, patients deemed stable with milder presentations of COVID-19 could be followed and monitored at home with serial telehealth visits. Furthermore, patients with ongoing chronic conditions who are at high risk for complications from COVID-19 infection could be provided with needed care via telehealth from the safety of their homes.

Betty Rabinowitz, MD, FACP, is chief medical officer at NextGen Healthcare and brings more than 25 years of extensive clinical experience and expansive knowledge of patient engagement, population health and value-based practice transformation. Born in Johannesburg, South Africa, Rabinowitz graduated from Ben-Gurion University Medical School in Israel, where she also completed a residency in internal medicine. Rabinowitz served as a medical director at the University of Rochester Center for Primary Care, overseeing clinical operations and population health management for a network of 28 practices and 130 primary care physicians.

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