Emergency doctors urged to avoid drugs used to ventilate COVID-19 patients
OTTAWA — The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians is calling on its doctors to protect the limited supply of certain sedatives and painkillers needed for patients on ventilators.
Putting a patient on an artificial breathing machine, as happens with people severely sick with COVID-19, usually requires a sedative like propofol, and painkillers like fentanyl and morphine.
The association warned Canada could have a critical shortage of those drugs in the coming weeks.
But those drugs are also commonly used in emergency rooms, and the association has urged emergency doctors to consider using alternatives.