As Editor-in-Chief of this journal and being personally involved as Chief of Radiology Department in a university Italian hospital within one of the major hotbeds of COVID-19, I feel compelled to write an editorial about the Italian COVID-19 outbreak.
As already highlighted by many published scientific papers [1], diagnostic imaging has a pivotal role in the diagnosis and management of the patients affected by COVID-19.
Although the main Worldwide Guidelines [2] define the molecular tests on nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs as the reference standard for the diagnosis, chest CT remains the main method for evaluating the disease pulmonary extension and for follow-up.
Moreover, several papers, mostly on Chinese case series, have identified and defined the main patterns at chest CT of pulmonary involvement in COVID-19; thus, the Chinese authors themselves and the American College of Radiology (ACR) highly recommend to familiarize with the CT appearance of COVID-19 infection [3, 4].
For this purpose, the President of the Italian Society of Medical and Interventional Radiology (SIRMi) established a dedicated page on the SIRMi Web site with an Italian collection of COVID-19 imaging; in this way, the Italian radiologists, and not only, can freely access and become familiar with CT and radiographic images of anonymized COVID-19 cases collected form several Italian centers.
Nevertheless, alongside the assistance to the patients affected by COVID-19, which mainly lies on a prompt and accurate diagnosis, I care to highlight another aspect: the huge effort that has been required to all the health professional of the radiology departments.
So far, radiologists, radiographers, nurses, healthcare workers and administrative staff are daily fighting the COVID-19 emergency on the frontline.
The World Health Organization (WHO) developed a document [5] defining rights, roles and responsibilities of all the healthworkers for the COVID-19 emergency setting.
I would like to emphasize that WHO highlights not only the infective risk, but also the dramatic raise of the working hours for the healthworkers and therefore the growth of the psychological stress, of the fatigue and of risk of burnout for the whole health-working category.
It is highly desirable that this document will be received in the radiological field.
In these hard times, together with the medical and radiological skills that each of us must put into practice, we should not forget that behind healthworkers involved in all the Italian radiological departments, there are women and men from whom a huge personal effort is requested, an effort which is tremendous and unique even compared to wars, natural disasters and epidemics we dealt with during the last century.
The whole staff of La Radiologia Medica, the President and the whole Board of Direction of SIRMi are strongly supporting and thanks all the women and men working in the Italian radiology departments.
All together we can overcome this challenge!
References
Li Y, Xia L (2020) Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): role of chest CT in diagnosis and management. AJR Am J Roentgenol 4:1–7
Chinese Society of Radiology (2020) Radiological diagnosis of new coronavirus infected pneumonitis: expert recommendation from the Chinese Society of Radiology (First edition). Chin J Radiol 54(00):E001. https://doi.org/10.3760/cma.j.issn.1005-1201.2020.0001
Bai HX, Hsieh B, Xiong Z, Halsey K, Choi JW, Tran TML et al (2020) Performance of radiologists in differentiating COVID-19 from viral pneumonia on chest CT. Radiology 10:200823
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Giovagnoni, A. Facing the COVID-19 emergency: we can and we do. Radiol med 125, 337–338 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11547-020-01178-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11547-020-01178-y