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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2023
The use of ECMO devices began about 50 years ago. The purpose of the ECMO device is to enable gas exchange (oxygen and carbon dioxide) and/or hemodynamic support in situations of pulmonary or heart failure to recover or to serve as a bridge in a waiting period for heart pulmonary, heart, or artificial heart transplantation. The COVID-19 outbreak increased the need for the use of ECMO as a life-saving treatment. As a result, there was an increasing demand for qualified personnel in overloaded hospitals' ICUs to care for COVID-19 patients in general, specifically for those who required ECMO treatment. These required rapid team training and new methodology development collaboration between the Ministry of Health (MOH), multi-disciplinary teams, and a national professional committee that set the treatment protocols based on universal standards.
A professional national committee was appointed by the MoH. The committee included Physicians, Nurses, Cardiopulmonary Bypass Machine Operators/Perfusionists as well as MoH representatives. The role of the committee was to establish guidelines and standards for operating ECMO services. These guidelines were adopted by the MoH and are the basic recommendations for operating ECMO units in Israeli hospitals.
The whole process had a dual challenge. One challenge was establishing new ECMO units according to the guidelines and the universal standards created by the committee. The other challenge was to motivate the old and experienced ECMO units to adopt and work according to the official standards set by the committee.
These days the committee started the evaluation of the old ECMO Units to bring all ECMO units in Israel to work by the same guidelines and standards.