One year ago we launched intubateCOVID and today we close our database to new data submissions. Thank you for all your hard work these past 12 months!
With your help, we published a number of papers and letters, and there is another accepted manuscript due to be published soon!
Next up in our speaker line up for #GAMC2024 is @adamspink. He is an air traffic controller at Heathrow and also works in their operations department, introducing new equipment + conducting safety analyses. #HumanFactors#TeamResourceManagement
Register👉https://t.co/wUOn2bo9C1
We are indebted to the frontline workers around the world who faced down their fears during the pandemic and stepped up delivering vital interventions to care for COVID-19 patients in respiratory failure.
"Emergency Airway Management in Patients with COVID-19: A Prospective International Multicenter Cohort Study" our 2nd full paper is available free & open access 🔓: https://t.co/j1VFOf7UUg
Analysis code: https://t.co/eJfxNOhL3G
#FOAMmed#FOAMed#rstats#openaccess#OpenScience
We have now closed and archived our registry. Thank you all for taking part. There will be future opportunities to work together. Alone we can only achieve so much, but together we can overcome all obstacles!
@dannyjnwong speaking about the results from
@IntubateCovid this evening at the John Smith Airway Award hosted by @Assoc_Anaes. If you're unable to tune in, catch a pre-recorded talk at: https://t.co/OHCoyzbVm5
@travellator2 Indications for intubation were 1) respiratory failure, 2) reduced GCS requiring airway protection and 3) cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
We do not know each individual sequence for needing surgical airway but infer they were needed following failure to intubate and oxygenate.
We have published our 2nd peer-reviewed full research article this week in @_Anesthesiology examining the success and failure of emergency tracheal intubations in patients with COVID-19.
The uncorrected proof is now available at:
https://t.co/MqSyTVjsjz
Thank you to the thousands of frontline clinicians looking after COVID-19 patients across the world who took part and submitted data to our registry. As we enter into the 3rd and 4th waves of this pandemic, we hope our data proves useful in caring for these high risk patients.
While we previously reported the risks to intubators of COVID-19 transmission in the days and weeks following performing the procedure, this time we report the risks to the patient for tracheal intubation failure and success. These must be considered when managing COVID-19.
Thank you all for participating and without your help during these past months, we would never have been able to achieve so much! It has been such a great international collaboration!
One year ago we launched intubateCOVID and today we close our database to new data submissions. Thank you for all your hard work these past 12 months!
With your help, we published a number of papers and letters, and there is another accepted manuscript due to be published soon!
We still have a manuscript that has been accepted for publication and is currently in process which we hope will shed more insights on the risks of intubation to patients with COVID-19, which will add to the literature around airway management in this high-risk patient group.