@article {Pezzulla917, author = {Donato Pezzulla and Gabriella Macchia and Francesco Taccari and Giovanna Sticca and Francesco Deodato}, title = {Radiotherapy in Southern Italy at the time of COVID-19: options for radiation oncology units}, volume = {30}, number = {7}, pages = {917--919}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1136/ijgc-2020-001523}, publisher = {BMJ Specialist Journals}, abstract = {Introduction The outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has spread to many countries and has been declared a global health emergency. Our center is located in the south of Italy where the infection rates were low and the clusters of COVID-19 positive patients were small and inhomogeneous. The aim of this short report is to share our experience as a starting point for the management of the steady state of the pandemic.Methods The safety of the patients and department staff required a strict plan to minimize the risk of infection between operators whose absence would have made it impossible to carry out the radiotherapy treatments. The head of the radiotherapy unit and members of the Hospital Crisis Unit have put in place a series of measures to manage the emergency.Results A {\textquotedblleft}clean{\textquotedblright} team has been established whose members are kept out of the radiotherapy unit for 2 weeks on rotation. Several separate work areas have been made in order to reduce direct contact between the staff. Each staff member has to wear protective equipment if close contact with patients is required. Before confirming a radiotherapy consult or a follow-up visit, telephone clinical and epidemiological screening is performed by nurses through a questionnaire regarding the presence of respiratory symptoms or eventual social contacts with COVID-19 positive people. Once the patients arrive in the hospital, a triage point at the entrance to the hospital performs a second screening and a temperature check.Conclusions This management experience of a radiotherapy unit in Southern Italy could serve as a useful example for the future. In fact, in the steady state of infection many centers may face epidemiologically contagious numbers similar to those that we currently have in our region. These numbers require the maintenance of alert and precautionary measures which in our case seem to have worked.}, issn = {1048-891X}, URL = {https://ijgc.bmj.com/content/30/7/917}, eprint = {https://ijgc.bmj.com/content/30/7/917.full.pdf}, journal = {International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer} }