Striking the right balance in Portugal

Striking the right balance in Portugal
Dermot McGrath
Dermot McGrath
Published: Friday, April 10, 2020
Filomena Ribeiro MD, PhD, FEBO, Head of the Ophthalmology Department at Hospital da Luz; Prof. at University of Lisbon, Portugal, describes the situation in her hospital to EuroTimes Contributing Editor Dermot McGrath. What protective measures are you taking for you and your patients? We have implemented strict measures at our hospital to try to limit exposure to COVID-19. We carry out an epidemiological questionnaire with patients before they are allowed to enter the hospital and also perform a temperature check. We have provided all staff with surgical masks, glasses, gloves and waterproof gowns. We use acrylic protectors for the slit lamp. We have stopped performing air puff tonometry and applanation tonometry except where absolutely necessary and use disposable tips. All of the rooms, materials and surfaces are thoroughly disinfected after every patient. These measures imply a major change in the structure and service compared to what we are used to. How are you organising things to deal with the crisis? By now, we have stratified the risk by pathologies in order to call only the most urgent cases. We have also developed guidelines for video consultations which we have started implementing. All departments at the hospital, including the OR, have separate circuits for positive and negative COVID-19 patients. In this way we try to minimise the risks for patients of worsening their ophthalmological diseases, which is a great risk during quarantine. On the other hand, our patients are usually elderly and have to be protected, so we try to strike the right balance. Thinking about the long term, we are hopeful that serological immunity tests will perhaps allow us to return to caring for our routine patients in the near future. The restart will have to be phased while maintaining the safety conditions for patients and professionals. A return to usual practice will be gradual and a long period of strict controls await us. We need to maintain this balance without jeopardising the visual health of our population. At this point in time, only a small percentage of the population will be immune and obtaining group immunity requires at least half of the population to have been infected with COVID-19, so the process is long. What are the more long-term implications for surgeons and their practices once the immediate crisis is over? I believe that even as citizens will be facing a new world after this catastrophe and its consequences will transform our way of practising. On the one hand, we will be more attentive to threats and the balance of resources that we have, as well as hopefully introducing more humanism into the equation. However, we will have to be very attentive to issues of poverty and economic difficulties that will emerge as a result of the pandemic. As doctors, we have to regain our value as a scientific community for society at large in terms of our primary role in treatment and research. That role has been mitigated in recent times by the influence of managers, regulators and politicians. If the COVID-19 crisis has taught us anything, it is that healthcare is a fundamental cornerstone of any healthy society and should not be measured only in terms of balance sheets and economics.
Tags: covid-19 Portugal
Latest Articles
Nutrition and the Eye: A Recipe for Success

A look at the evidence for tasty ways of lowering risks and improving ocular health.

Read more...

New Award to Encourage Research into Sustainable Practices

Read more...

Sharing a Vision for the Future

ESCRS leaders update Trieste conference on ESCRS initiatives.

Read more...

Extending Depth of Satisfaction

The ESCRS Eye Journal Club discuss a new study reviewing the causes and management of dissatisfaction after implantation of an EDOF IOL.

Read more...

Conventional Versus Laser-Assisted Cataract Surgery

Evidence favours conventional technique in most cases.

Read more...

AI Scribing and Telephone Management

Automating note-taking and call centres could boost practice efficiency.

Read more...

AI Analysis and the Cornea

A combination of better imaging and AI deep learning could significantly improve corneal imaging and diagnosis.

Read more...

Cooking a Feast for the Eyes

A cookbook to promote ocular health through thoughtful and traditional cuisine.

Read more...

Need to Know: Spherical Aberration

Part three of this series examines spherical aberration and its influence on higher-order aberrations.

Read more...

Generating AI’s Potential

How generative AI impacts medicine, society, and the environment.

Read more...