4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Summary of European guidelines on infection control and prevention during COVID-19 pandemic

Journal

CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH
Volume 32, Issue -, Pages 353-381

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/clr.13784

Keywords

COVID-19 pandemic; guideline; infection control and prevention; personal protective equipment

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, European countries have developed dental care guidelines with general consensus on triage, mouth rinse, and personal protective equipment for aerosol generating procedures and treatment of potentially infectious patients. However, there is considerable variation in recommendations regarding personal protective equipment for non-aerosol generating procedures among the European countries.
Objectives The current COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need for a review of guidelines on infection control and prevention to ensure safe delivery of dental care. However, it is not clear to what extent the rapidly published European guidelines reflect the current evidence and thus provide homogeneous recommendations. Material & Methods Guidelines from all European Union countries, Scotland, Switzerland and United Kingdom were retrieved. Information on triage, mouth rinse, personal protective equipment (PPE) for aerosol free/ generating procedures (non-AGP/AGP) and treatment of potentially infectious patients were summarized and compared with recommendations from international organizations (WHO, ECDC, CDC). Results All included countries (30/30) published COVID-19 guidelines in 2020. All countries recommended triage and to postpone non-urgent treatment of potentially infectious patients. Hydrogen peroxide (1%-1.5%) was the most frequently recommended antiseptic mouth rinse to reduce viral load (24/30). PPE for non-AGP treatments included mainly surgical masks (21/30) or FFP2/FFP3/N95 masks (16/30), whereas FFP2/FFP3 masks (25/30) and face shields (24/30) were recommended for AGP by the vast majority of guidelines. For high-risk/COVID positive patients, most countries recommended maximum protection and treatment in specialized dental clinics (22/30). Conclusion There was general agreement among recommendations for triage, mouth rinse, and PPE during AGP and treatment of potentially infectious patients. In contrast, recommendations on PPE for non-AGP treatment varied considerably among the European countries possibly due to limited scientific evidence regarding transmission risk during non-AGP treatments.

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