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Review

COVID-19 rapid guideline: dialysis service delivery

No authors listed
London: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE); 2020 Sep 11.
Free Books & Documents
Review

COVID-19 rapid guideline: dialysis service delivery

No authors listed.
Free Books & Documents

Excerpt

The purpose of this guideline is to maximise the safety of patients on dialysis, while protecting staff from infection. It will also enable dialysis services to make the best use of NHS resources and match the capacity of dialysis services to patient needs if these become limited because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

NICE has also produced COVID-19 rapid guidelines on acute kidney injury in hospital, chronic kidney disease and renal transplantation.

On 11 September 2020 we clarified our guidance for organisations on planned procedures and emergency pathways for creating dialysis access sites for patients with advanced or end-stage kidney disease.

This guideline focuses on what you need to stop or start doing during the pandemic. Follow the usual professional guidelines, standards and laws (including those on equalities, safeguarding, communication and mental capacity), as described in making decisions using NICE guidelines.

This guideline is for:

  1. health and care practitioners

  2. health and care staff involved in planning and delivering services

  3. commissioners.

The recommendations bring together:

  1. existing national and international guidance and policies

  2. advice from specialists working in the NHS from across the UK. These include people with expertise and experience of treating patients for the specific health conditions covered by the guidance during the current COVID-19 pandemic.

We developed this guideline using the interim process and methods for developing rapid guidelines on COVID-19 in response to the rapidly evolving situation. We will review and update the recommendations as the knowledge base develops using the interim process and methods for guidelines developed in response to health and social care emergencies.

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