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Should patients with epistaxis and nasal packing be admitted during the COVID-19 Pandemic? A retrospective study of 885 adult cases with epistaxis.
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  • Vasileios Lachanas,
  • Nick Kalogritsas,
  • Georgios Kontorinis,
  • ANNA MPOURONIKOU,
  • Jiannis Hajiioannou,
  • Fani Saini,
  • Hara Maiou,
  • Charalampos Skoulakis
Vasileios Lachanas
University Hospital of Larissa

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Nick Kalogritsas
University Hospital of Larissa
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Georgios Kontorinis
Institute of Neurological Sciences, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital
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ANNA MPOURONIKOU
University Hospital of Larissa
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Jiannis Hajiioannou
University Hospital of Larissa
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Fani Saini
University Hospital of Larissa
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Hara Maiou
University Hospital of Larissa
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Charalampos Skoulakis
University Hospital of Larissa
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Abstract

Key point: • Being one of the commonest presenting emergencies, epistaxis can increase the pressure on the health service; in times similar to COVID-19 pandemic such pressure can be crucial and challenging to deal with. • Non-absorbable nasal packing and home discharge for selected patients can be a safe and efficient alternative treatment method with low readmission rates (5.3 %); such management can be of tremendous help when the hospital capacity is overwhelmed. • Although such protocols can be challenging to generalize, the presented protocol seems safe, easily adoptable without any significant complications.