key: cord-270348-5804ffwx authors: Angelino, Andrew F.; Lyketsos, Constantine G.; Ahmed, M. Shafeeq; Potash, James B.; Cullen, Bernadette A. title: Design and implementation of a regional inpatient psychiatry unit for asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 positive patients. date: 2020-07-02 journal: Psychosomatics DOI: 10.1016/j.psym.2020.06.018 sha: doc_id: 270348 cord_uid: 5804ffwx Patients with psychiatric illnesses are particularly vulnerable to highly contagious, droplet spread organisms like SARS-CoV-2. Patients with mental illnesses may not be able to consistently follow behavioral prescriptions to avoid contagion, and they are frequently found in settings with close contact and inadequate infection control, such as group homes, homeless shelters, residential rehabilitation centers, and correctional facilities. Further, inpatient psychiatry settings are generally designed as communal spaces, with heavy emphasis on group and milieu therapies. As such, inpatient psychiatry services are vulnerable to rampant spread of contagion. With this in mind, the authors outline the decision process and ultimate design and implementation of a regional inpatient psychiatry unit for asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infected patients, and share key points for consideration in implementing future units elsewhere. A major take-away point of the analysis is the particular expertise of trained experts in psychosomatic medicine for treating SARS-CoV-2 infected patients. Modern inpatient psychiatry is different from medical and surgical inpatient services in several ways. Psychiatric units are designed to be therapeutic communities that provide "milieu therapy" providing a normalizing, structured day. They have communal spaces for group therapies, social and recreational activity, and meals. Patients are encouraged to be up and out of their rooms throughout the day, participating in the milieu. Many units begin and end each day with a community meeting when patients and staff share their goals and progress. When safe, patients are encouraged to wear their own clothing rather than hospital attire, as long as it is not disruptive the community (e.g., not provocative, sexually or socially inappropriate). In contrast, patients in general hospital rooms wear hospital gowns, mostly stay in bed and eat in their rooms. Medications are brought to them in bed. They are taken around the hospitals for tests, therapies, and procedures, at least at first. This promotes rest and focus on physical recovery. Psychiatry recovery focuses on resumption of autonomous direction of activities, through participation in a normal day of work (therapy) with relaxing engagement in social activity. Furthermore, many psychiatrists today specialize in the care of patients with comorbid psychiatric and medical disorders. The branch of psychosomatic medicine encompasses not only experts in consultation-liaison psychiatry, but includes subspecialists in psycho-oncology, HIV psychiatry, hepatitis psychiatry, perinatal psychiatry, and functional gastroenterologic disorders, to name a few. These consultation-liaison and subspecialty psychiatrists often undergo extra fellowship training and board certification, and are well-suited to care for complex patients with medical and psychiatric comorbidities. Additionally, some hospitals have developed special medical-psychiatric units to manage acute patients with comorbid disorders. The models vary somewhat, but typically involve some form of co-management process with psychiatric and somatic providers, as well as specialized nurse training to manage patient comorbidities. In this era of integrated care and services, such units, and the specialists who staff them, provide key resources to the healthcare system. With this background in mind, it is easy to see how a highly contagious, droplet and contact spread virus, like SARS-CoV-2, could run rampant through a standard psychiatric unit 1,2 . Personal isolation is anti-therapeutic to many psychiatric illnesses like depression and schizophrenia. Severely psychotic and manic patients are vulnerable to inappropriate behaviors, such as intrusiveness and disregard for behavioral rules, like wearing a mask or hand washing. Removal of therapy from the environment in psychiatry would eliminate a significant aspect of recovery, relying only on medications to treat illnesses. While medications are often necessary for recovery, without the practice of new thoughts and skills recovery is incomplete. As such, when confronted with the care of psychiatric inpatients infected with SARS-CoV-2 but asymptomatic of its illness, the idea of closing or significantly changing inpatient psychiatry services, or treating such inpatients in medical units, was not accepted at our institution. Instead, we sought to preserve our established methods of treating patients, while finding a way to reduce or eliminate the threat of contagion. As soon as tests were available, all hospital patients in our system with COVID-19 symptoms were being tested, either in Emergency Departments or on inpatient medical units. Everyone who tested positive for viral RNA was admitted to an inpatient medical unit. At first, our psychiatry inpatient focus was monitoring for symptoms and preventing the spread of infection, transferring symptomatic patients to medicine units to be ruled out or treated. We attempted to create distances between psychiatric inpatients by implementing single occupancy rooms where possible, moving from family style to tray meals, and moving furniture in our day areas so that they were placed 6 feet apart. We adopted novel practices, such as shared online rounding, with the doctor and patient in one room and staff in their individual offices connected by synchronous video. We began requiring all staff and patients to wear face masks, to avoid droplet spread. These were improvements, but as patients and clinical staff share many spaces at different points in time, we still risked exposure, especially between cleanings of common areas and items. To prevent COVID-19 outbreaks in our units, we next decided to require universal nasal swab testing for SARS-CoV-2 for all medically asymptomatic patients being admitted to psychiatric units 3 . With universal testing, two challenges remained. First, false negative tests do occur, usually due to inadequate sample collection. We thought that the rate of this was low enough that with frequent symptom screening, distancing, masking, and systematic cleaning we would likely have safe environments. Second, we realized that we needed to decide where to care for SARS-CoV-2 positive, medically asymptomatic patients with mental illnesses who required hospitalization-those without symptoms of COVID-19. One option was to admit such patients to medical units in negative pressure rooms, provide medications and virtual therapies via our consultation services 4 . While attractive, this idea had a few problems. Our patients would be taking up negative pressure rooms best assigned to patients with COVID-19 who required medical care. Further, medical unit COVID-19 rooms are not "psychiatrically safe" as most have many ligature points that would require 1:1 oversight with all patients to mitigate the risk of self-injury. We also faced a legal challenge: our legal team informed us that in Maryland it is unlawful to involuntarily commit a patient to a "medical bed." Although we could not find a specific statute prohibiting involuntary psychiatric commitment to a medical facility, we found other language saying that practices involving committed patients do not pertain to facilities without specific psychiatric treatment units 5 . Thus inpatient medical admission can only be an option for voluntary patients. If they chose to leave against medical advice, we would not have a good legal way to detain them for psychiatric care. Some of us argued that it could be declared that the patient lacked capacity to decide to leave and we could detain them. Besides being legally questionable, this argument fell flat because we have a strong commitment to patient autonomy and use involuntary certification as a last resort. As such, we had strong opinion against anything that would expand involuntary treatment without due process to protect patient rights and autonomy. In light of the above, we concluded it would best serve our patients if we developed an inpatient psychiatric unit capable of accepting SARS-CoV-2 infected patients without COVID-19 symptoms, or with mild enough symptoms that they would not require medical hospitalization. The next question was where in our system to do this, and what resources would be required. As the unit would have to be able to accept involuntary patients, only two of our hospitals, Johns Hopkins Hospital and Howard County General Hospital, were eligible sites -Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Suburban Hospital and Sibley Memorial Hospital are voluntary only for psychiatric admissions and do not have the ability to hold administrative law hearings on site. As we developed our thoughts as to how to design and implement this unit, we contacted colleagues around the country to see if anyone else was taking this approach. In late March, we only found one source in Israel. We sought guidance from Dr. Mark Weiser, head of the psychiatric division of Sheba Medical Center Tel HaShomer in Tel Aviv, Israel. Dr. Weiser had opened a psychiatric unit at his hospital to receive SARS-CoV-2 infected patients without COVID-19 patients from all other hospitals in Israel 6 , just as we sought to do for Maryland. That unit was designed rapidly, with safety in mind, and an emphasis on minimizing staff presence on the unit to decrease exposures. He detailed for us the installation of cameras in all rooms to monitor patients for decompensation, and a remote ability to lock a patient's room door, allowing staff time to don PPE to be able to enter and intervene for an acutely agitated patient. We also discussed use of medications for these patients, and our mutual idea was to try to get to full doses of medications as quickly as safely possible, to avoid outbursts, especially in psychotic and manic patients. Fortuitously, Howard County General Hospital had just opened a new psychiatric unit, with major safety and cosmetic upgrades. In so doing, the old 20-bed unit had been decommissioned, and had not yet been remodeled into something else, but had undergone renovations in the year prior to mitigate ligature risk. It has 10 semi-private rooms, and was a medical unit before a psychiatry unit, thus having available oxygen and suction in all rooms. It has a large day room for groups and activities, and there is a sally port (air lock type) entrance with two sets of double doors providing security for visitors and space to prepare prior to entry to the unit. After discussion, we decided that the old unit at Howard County would become the site for the Johns Hopkins inpatient psychiatry unit for SARS-CoV-2 infected patients without COVID-19. We would have 1 bed per room to begin, expanding as necessary to meet need, with a maximum of 20 patients. [Insert Table 1 here.] For most medical units treating droplet-borne contagious illnesses, negative pressure rooms are the norm. To ensure droplet precautions, providers don personal protective equipment (PPE), i.e., mask, face shield, gown and gloves, in the hallway, enter the room, provide service, doff gown and gloves, exit the room and have assistance with wiping hard surface equipment, i.e., face shields, from a safety officer in the hallway. For our psychiatry unit, we wished to normalize behaviors. To this end, we decided to make the entire unit a negative pressure space and use the sally port entrance as the donning/doffing area for staff (see Figures 1 and 2 ). This was accomplished by our engineering department in a matter of days. Three large blowers were installed. The first blows air into the sally port area, making it a positive pressure clean space. Any droplets on the new unit would be kept from entering by positive pressure behind the doors. This area was divided into a "clean" and "dirty" side, so that donning PPE happens on the clean side prior to entry, while doffing takes place on the dirty side after exit. A safety officer is stationed in the space to assist with donning, doffing and cleaning. The second and third blowers were installed at the ends of the unit, each blowing air outside through windows that were converted to vents. These blowers are secured behind vented walls. In this way, airflow from the unit itself is vented outside to dissipate to a very low transmission density, and the entire unit becomes a negative pressure space, including the rooms, hallways, showers, and the day room/activity space. It is important to note here that with this design decision, the unit would accept only SARS-CoV-2 infected patients, and not patients awaiting SARS-CoV-2 test results, so called PUIs or patients under investigation. Placing a PUI in the space might expose them to SARS-CoV-2, so we have to have a positive nasal swab result before the patient arrives. The nursing station, being attached to the sally port, was maintained as a positive pressure, clean space. This allows staff to wear only standard precautions in the clean space, which is a surgical mask, without face shield or other eye protection. In the nursing station, medications are kept in the dispenser machine, there are several workstations for documentation, and there is a break room for rehydration and snacks. In the negative pressure space on the unit, there is a single workstation on wheels, for documentation by the nurse on the unit. As wearing PPE for long periods of time is uncomfortable and adds stress to staff, it was decided to staff the unit with enough nurses that they could swap out after every 2 hours of being on the unit -2 hours in, 2 hours out. Our standard nurse-to-patient ration is 1:6, so we staffed for 6 beds to start-even though we have 10 rooms-with 2 nurses, 1 patient care technician, and 1 security guard. Security typically sits in the nursing station, while the nurses and technician take turns entering the unit with the patients. Security is trained in donning PPE quickly to respond to urgent issues. As we have only 4 psychiatrists and 1 psychiatric nurse practitioner at Howard County General Hospital, and we still have to staff our other inpatient unit, our consult service, our outpatient clinic, and provide support to the Emergency Department, we chose to staff the COVID unit with a single dedicated psychiatrist with a plan for back-up with psychiatrists from our other hospitals if needed. To best support the staff through this effort, the Howard County General Hospital department chair (AA) decided to personally attend to patients on the unit, following the idea that leaders go first in difficult tasks. Further, so as not to overburden other weekend call providers, and to provide continuity, we chose to have the same psychiatrist cover COVID unit rounds on the weekend. We had a discussion about the best ways to see patients in "hot zone" areas. Other systems had elected to remove the psychiatrist from the in-person experiences, opting to use telehealth solutions exclusively. While we have adopted use of telepsychiatry for seeing some patients on the consultation service who have COVID-19, the method is problematic at times. Some patients cannot keep the camera on themselves, there are frequent volume issues with microphones and speakers, and less frequently, connectivity problems disrupt the flow of conversation. One advantage to telepsychiatry is that the provider can be in an area where s/he can remove the mask, allowing the patient to see a human face with all its expressions. A second point, however, relates to the division of labor and risk among members of the treatment team. Having providers exclusively use telepsychiatry while nurses and technicians have to wear PPE to enter the infectious area created a discussion for us about fairness. Ultimately, we decided for our inpatient COVID unit, providers would use PPE and round in-person on the patients daily, as on our other inpatient psychiatry units. In thinking about the patients' needs, we realized that a high degree of medical sophistication would be necessary for daily assessments. Our department is fortunate to have expert trained and certified psychosomatic medicine psychiatrists, with experience in managing patients with serious mental and physical comorbidities. As we wished to describe the staffing needs for this paper, we thought about how best to convey this to other systems needing to develop such a unit. We recommend that the psychiatrists and nurses staffing the unit be well-versed in the assessment and treatment of COVID-19 disease and have a high comfort level with physical examination and provision of medical treatments, such as oxygen, fluids and coagulation prophylaxis, in order to best serve patients with mild disease in situ on the psychiatry unit. Further, it is highly beneficial for continuity of care if the patient requires transfer to a medical COVID-19 unit that the psychiatrist be able to follow them there and maintain the psychiatric treatments as indicated. Thus the COVID psychiatry inpatient unit should be the equivalent of a medical psychiatry unit, with the ability to manage mild COVID-19 disease, and the gold standard for psychiatrist staffing is a trained psychosomatic medicine or consultation-liaison psychiatrist who has knowledge of COVID-19 disease. Our initial staffing plan with the chair at Howard County General demonstrated this, as he is a specialist in HIV and hepatitis psychiatry and consultation-liaison psychiatry, and thus he is able to provide the medical expertise needed to effectively manage these patients. Patient assessment for transfer to the COVID inpatient psychiatry unit also involves a degree of expertise about COVID-19 disease. In our system, one expert consultation-liaison psychiatrist assesses all requested transfers to determine the level of care required on the unit. Some medically hospitalized COVID-19 patients may be physically recovering from the respiratory illness and require psychiatric intervention for a separate mental illness. While there is some information that such patients may no longer be infectious, we suggest either viral load testing if it is available, or the recent practice of 2 negative nasopharyngeal swab tests 24 hours apart if they are to be transferred to a regular psychiatry unit 7 . It is our practice that if the patient has a positive nasopharyngeal swab test, they be admitted to the COVID psychiatry inpatient unit to prevent any chance of spreading virus to non-infected patients and staff. Further, some patients develop a protracted delirium after serious COVID-19 illness, especially if a long intubation and intensive care unit stay was involved, and a trained consultationliaison psychiatrist would best be suited to assisting in the treatment of these patients on the medical unit, rather than transferring them to inpatient psychiatry. The infection control experts recommend several options for PPE. In areas with many SARS-CoV-2 infected persons, we can choose between N95 or Drager masks, with a face shield, or a PAPR (Powered Air Purifying Respirator) hood. We were test-fitted for N95 masks and Dragers, and trained on PAPR use. All persons wear a gown and two pairs of gloves, one under the gown sleeves and one over. There is a process for donning and doffing. The first decision is mask + face shield or PAPR. The PAPR can be worn without a mask, allowing the patient to see the provider's face, which we think is comforting to psychiatric patients, so we most often use PAPRs on the unit. However, there was concern that if a patient becomes violent, during the response to the violence, a clinician might have the PAPR torn off, exposing the face openly if no mask is worn underneath. Thus, some staff in some situations wear a PAPR with a mask and glasses underneath. This approach is also used on Dr. Weiser's unit in Israel. On the subject of violence with PPE, we have several different options for gowning. Most common and cost efficient are yellow paper gowns, often worn by providers making quicker visits to the unit to see patients, such as the rounding psychiatrist. Nurses and technicians, who spend more time on the unit, often wear surgical gowns that provide more coverage around the body and are more tear-resistant should a physical hold be necessary. Finally, we have tear-resistant jumpsuits, most worn by security, who have the most hands-on in a violence situation. A final word about PPE. It is very difficult and far higher risk for an individual to don and doff PPE without help, especially for the wiping down after exiting the unit or room. This requires extra staff to be present. Further, as mentioned above, we staff 2 nurses per 6 patients, rather than 1, so as to be able to give relief to the nurse wearing the PPE -this was done in 2 hour shifts as PPE is very uncomfortable to wear for periods longer than 2 hours. It is also important to remind staff to maintain hydration once they are out of PPE, as they do not have the ability to take fluids while on the unit in PPE. We have ASCOM phones for nursing staff. One phone is handed off from nurse to nurse inside the unit. For quick communications, we have a small white board and dry-erase marker to share messages through the window to the nurses' station. Most longer communications are from the ASCOM phone to the landline in the nursing station. Medications, meals, snacks, and supplies are passed through the entrance to the unit by the safety officer. There is no donning, but the safety officer wears a mask and shield at all times, and uses gloves to pass objects through the entrance. We use disposable items for as much as possible -meal trays, utensils, scrubs for patients. Linens are handled in the normal way. We allow patients to wear some regular clothes, provided they are safe and the patient is clinically OK to do so. There is a washer and dryer on the unit for patients' personal laundry. We have iPads on the unit, encased in strong protective cases, for patients to have video visits with providers and family members, to watch videos or play games. These are swapped out when they need to be charged, and wiped down by the safety officer in the sally port before and after charging. The unit has television and a video game system can be attached for recreation. The most challenging aspect of care is the provision of anything other than 1:1 therapy. We do not have Occupational Therapy providers on the unit, and we have only 1 nurse at a time, so there is no one available to lead groups. Patients with alcohol and drug problems attend online meetings using iPads. For one patient who was struggling with coming out as gay to his family, we were able to find online support groups through an LGBTQ support organization's website. We are investigating using video connections to the groups already happening on our other inpatient unit, but as of this writing, the logistics are not fully worked out. We have had several art/craft sessions led by our patient care technicians. Activities are easier to accomplish. We have games and puzzles for patients, and staff assist in playing them. We allow patients to watch online content on iPads, provided it is appropriate, and there is a TV room. There is a phone bank so patients may call family. We do not allow in-person visitors at this time. As mentioned above, we have a unit that accepts both voluntary and involuntary patients. According to Maryland law, involuntary patients must have a hearing with the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) to determine commitment to treatment within 10 days of admission. For both our regular psychiatric units and our COVID unit, these hearings are currently conducted via secure video conference. The public defender meets with the patient via video conference prior to the hearing to prepare a position, and the hearing is conducted via group video conference. We monitor vital signs every 6 hours, including pulse oximetry. Nurses screen thrice daily for cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea and vomiting. Every patient has a physical exam by an internist, laboratory testing for coagulopathy and inflammation, and follow up daily by the internist. Our observation thus far has taught us that serious COVID-19 symptoms usually arrive in the first week of infection, and our only transfer out of the unit to medicine happened 4 days after his positive test. Most patients have been completely asymptomatic on the unit, while a few have developed mild complaints of cough or subjective shortness of breath. We manage mild complaints symptomatically, and have the ability to provide oxygen on the unit. Our medical colleagues are invaluable in determining which patients are sick enough to require transfer to a medical bed -usually this takes the form of an oxygen requirement beyond 2 liters by nasal cannula. All other medical care is as usual, with a general rule of thumb being that we manage any chronic medical illness that would be managed as an outpatient, e.g., controlled hypertension, controlled diabetes, etc. One area that is a bit tricky is the monitoring of patients requiring detoxification from alcohol or opioids on the unit. We provide active withdrawal protocols, using benzodiazepines for alcohol withdrawal and buprenorphine for opioid withdrawal, and in general, monitor vital signs and symptoms closely, concentrating on respiratory symptoms and pulse oximetry to guide intervention for COVID-19. There are three ways someone can be discharged from the unit. First, and most undesirable, a patient is transferred to a medicine unit if s/he decompensates medically and requires acute medical attention beyond what is available on the unit. While we can provide oxygen, if the person requires >2 L of oxygen by nasal cannula, it is unsafe for them to stay on the unit where there is not a medical provider nearby 24/7. We did have one patient so far leave this way, but he did well with medical treatment and returned to our unit after a few days on medicine. Second, patient can be discharged if they get better psychiatrically and no longer require inpatient care. This proves challenging if they are still positive for SARS-CoV-2. Many placements, e.g., group homes, assisted living facilities, residential rehabilitation facilities, shelters, etc., require patients to be tested negative before they can enter. Some patients have homes to go to, and are discharged home with instructions on maintaining quarantine until it is safe for them to stop-according to CDC guidelines 8 . Although this discharge-to-quarantine process has a different feel for the social worker arranging aftercare, there is actually not much difference in follow up care. Many providers are using telepsychiatry visits, so we can get appointments while patients are still in quarantine. Intensive outpatient and partial hospitalization programs in Maryland are currently closed or providing only telepsychiatry options, so this does not differ for SARS-CoV-2 positive patients from non-infected patients. Our only real concern was acquiring medications after discharge, as quarantined patients picking up prescriptions from a pharmacy proved a challenge. We address this by having a 2-week supply of medicines filled before discharge by our pharmacy and delivered to our unit so patients can leave with medications in hand. Transport home as well proves an issue. To decrease exposure of family members due to close proximity on the ride home, we use a medical transport van that allows for distance from the driver and have the patient wear a mask home. To sign discharge paperwork we bring the patient into the sally port wearing a mask, ask them to put on gloves, have them sign the paperwork and give them a copy. The hospital copy is kept in the nurses' station for 1 day in a secure area before being taken to Health Information Technology (medical records) to be scanned into the record, in order to decrease possible contamination. Third, a patient may be discharged is if they are on the unit long enough to clear SARS-CoV-2 virus and can be transferred to a regular psychiatric unit, a residential program or group home or to their own home. We have had only one experience of a patient requiring continued psychiatric care after clearing the virus, and we have had a couple on the unit long enough to merit testing at time of discharge, who were discharged to group homes or programs after testing SARS-CoV-2 negative. We closely follow CDC guidelines as they are updated with new information, so as to best decide on timing of testing and how to handle patients with prolonged positive PCR results. We are fortunate to have a very dedicated, highly experienced staff of physicians, nurses, patient care techs and security. All staff working on the unit voluntarily. As mentioned above, the chair of the department personally staffs the unit daily, which also was advised by Dr. Weiser in Israel, as it boosts morale to see leaders working alongside everyone. We frequently check in with unit staff, and the hospital as a whole, to be alert for signs of fatigue, stress, anxiety, depression. On the whole, our psychiatry staff are open about their feelings and well-being, as we have created an environment in which expressing such is safe from repercussion or retaliation. We focus efforts on recognizing everyone's vital contribution to the team and our interdependence on one another, creating trust in our culture that everyone is valued and will be supported in our efforts. Our department has teamed with other support systems within the Johns Hopkins system, including our R.I.S.E program (Resilience In Stressful Events), which provides confidential, trained-peer support 24/7. Additionally, our faculty and staff assistance programs provide professional counseling and psychotherapy treatments for our employees. Finally, the department of psychiatry added urgent appointments for psychiatric evaluation by faculty members for employees with more serious issues, including requirement for medications. In addition to this spectrum of care, one of our faculty implemented daily virtual mindfulness video conferences, available to all Johns Hopkins employees to participate. We have held video meetings with hospital managers from every department, presenting warning signs of burnout, as well as a tiered approach to referrals of employees for help. Community support is widespread and tremendous. From meals and snacks to personal care products such as lotion for chapped hands, many individuals and organizations have contributed to staff support throughout the hospital. Staff from non-isolation units and administrative areas have been very kind to deliver things to the isolation units for staff who cannot easily and safely get away to collect them from drop-off points. We present this account of our efforts to inform those faced with a similar problem. When we opened the unit on April 21, 2020, we did not know of any similar units in the United States. We are now aware of several, and have learned that their processes are very similar to ours. Most recently, an account of principles that guided the planning of a COVID+ unit in California were published online. 9 As the practices at our institution and those we have found are compared and discussed, best practices will be defined in this area, and support the development and implementation of units everywhere they are required. We recommend that such a unit would be best implemented in a medical psychiatry unit, but if none is available, the unit would be best placed inside a general hospital that has ability to care for COVID-19 ill patients should they become too acute to be managed safely on the inpatient psychiatry unit. Further, we feel the gold standard of psychiatrist staffing for such a unit be a trained psychosomatic medicine psychiatrist with knowledge of COVID-19 illness, for reviewing appropriateness of patients referred for admission to the unit, and for daily monitoring of psychiatric and medical signs and symptoms and management of mild COVID-19 illness. Systems issues a. How does the system process SARS-CoV-2 testing for admitted patients? i. 1 test, 2 tests separated by 24 hours, rapid tests or regular-time tests, etc.? b. How will SARS-CoV-2 positive patients be admitted? i. Does the system have a plan for admitting SARS-CoV-2 negative patients to a different facility, or a different unit within the same facility? c. What is the best location for a SARS-CoV-2 positive asymptomatic psychiatry unit in the system? i. Medical capabilities, consultations, ICU access, etc. ii. Voluntary v. involuntary patients II. Unit design a. How many beds? Single or double rooms? b. Will there be communal spaces for treatment/activity? c. Will patients eat in their rooms? d. If patients are in their rooms with doors closed for negative pressure, how will they be monitored? e. How will the unit handle seclusion/restraint events? f. Does the unit have adequate wifi for video conferences as required? g. Where will be the clean zones for donning/doffing PPE? III. Staffing a. Is there a consultation-liaison psychiatrist or other psychiatrist with knowledge of COVID-19 illness and comfortable with managing minor disease? b. How many nursing staff per patient? c. Will staff be required to wear PPE for extended periods or only while interacting with patients in their rooms? d. Will providers see patients face to face or via telepsychiatry? e. How many assistant staff will be required for donning/doffing PPE? IV. PPE a. What PPE is available for your unit? b. How will staff be trained in use of PPE? V. Activities and Groups a. What therapies will be offered and how? b. What activities will be available for recreation? c. How will the unit handle visitors? VI. Involuntary patients a. Will the unit accept involuntary patients? b. How will legal conferences and hearings be handled? VII. Medical monitoring a. Who will be responsible for vital signs and pulse oximetry and how often? b. What processes are in place for rapid intervention for patients developing illness? c. What is the transfer process? d. How will repeat SARS-CoV-2 testing be done to determine negativity, if required? VIII. Discharges a. How will aftercare be arranged? b. Are medicines available for patients being discharged into quarantine? c. How will SARS-CoV-2 positive patients be transported to their discharge site? IX. Staff Support a. What systems are in place to monitor staff for symptoms of stress? b. What resources are in place to help staff deal with stress? c. How do staff access higher levels of evaluation or treatment if necessary? Advance It was a medical disaster': the psychiatric ward that saw 100 patients with new coronavirus COVID-19 testing and patients in mental health facilities COVID-19 diary from a psychiatry department in Italy Annotated Code of Maryland Cautionary Tale Spurs 'World's First' COVID-19 Psychiatric Ward -Medscape Virological assessment of hospitalized patients with COVID-2019 Discontinuation of Transmission -Based Precautions and Disposition of Patients with COVID-19 in Healthcare Settings (Interim Guidance). Decision Memo 2020 Planning for a Psychiatric COVID-19-Positive Unit -Medscape Sally port doffing area (dirty) Nurses' station (clean) Occupational therapy/Art room 10. Seclusion suite 11. Nutrition 12. Quiet/reading room 13. Shower 14. Interview room 15. Clean supply 16. Patient belongings 17. Staff bathroom 18 The authors would like to thank Drs. Mark Weiser, Patrick Triplett, Karin Neufeld, Erica Richards, Cynthia Lewis and Ashley Bone, as well as Ryan Brown, Jennifer Baldwin, Angela McKay, Kelly Caslin, Laurie Burdock, Zahra Parva and Susan Webb for their contributions to this process.