Hidden Jewel: As The The Hyperbaric Treatment Center Celebrates 25 Years, Medical Director Shares Past, Present And Future Of HTC
Photo: Originally published in the Hawaii Medical Journal, January 2021 issue
Originally Posted On: Hidden Jewel: As the The Hyperbaric Treatment Center celebrates 25 years, medical director shares past, present and future of HTC – University Health Partners of Hawaii (uhphawaii.org)
Written by Dr. Susan Steinemann
Medical Director, UHP Hyperbaric Treatment Center
You may have walked past the nondescript building at the southeast corner of the Kuakini campus, not realizing that it houses an essential resource for our state. The Hyperbaric Treatment and Wound Care Center (HTC), Hawaii’s “dive chamber,” has been providing life- and limb-saving hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) for over 37 years, now celebrating its 25th anniversary at its present location at Hale Pulama Mau. The unassuming facade belies its importance as the only emergency hyperbaric chamber in the state, serving the most critical patients in need of HBOT, and an essential safety net for military and commercial operations. The chamber is owned by the University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM), and staffed and supported by University Health Partners, the faculty practice of JABSOM. The HTC has an illustrious history of research under Drs. Beckman, Farm, Overlock, and Smerz, and is a training site for medical students, residents and fellows both local and international.
HBOT is the primary treatment for decompression illness (“the bends”) and arterial gas embolism, and reduces the mortality from acute carbon monoxide poisoning.1 Patients with these maladies can be critically ill, paralyzed or require ventilator support. The large multiplace HTC chamber enables care as it allows medical equipment and multiple clinicians to be in the chamber with the patient. It accommodates various patient positions, oral intake, and intravenous therapy. However, it also is very resource-intensive to operate, requiring constant maintenance and a minimum of four technicians and clinicians to treat a single patient. Economic pressures have made multiplace chambers an endangered species, less than 16% of hyperbaric facilities have multiplace chambers, and only 12% provide emergency services to high-acuity patients.2
According to the Hawaiian Islands Recreational Scuba Association, an average of 1,000 divers per day participated in recreational scuba diving activities in Hawaii waters in pre-pandemic times. Military, research and commercial entities also engage in daily dive operations. Despite technological advances including dive computers and detailed safety protocols, HTC continues to treat approximately two dozen patients per year with serious dive-related injuries. Many of these patients adhered to their dive plan and dive computers, i.e. suffered an “undeserved hit.” Healthcare related events such as iatrogenic air embolism, and environmental exposures such as carbon monoxide poisoning, remain omnipresent and unpredictable risks. All of these patients require expedient evaluation and treatment, and the HTC is their lifeline. The next closest emergency chamber is in San Diego; inherent delays in treatment and risks of air transport would significantly increase morbidity in Hawaii patients.
Over 10% of Hawaii residents have diabetes, with an even greater prevalence among Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders. Diabetics have a roughly one in four chance of developing a foot ulcer, associated with an 11% annual mortality in Medicare beneficiaries. The American Diabetes Association consensus statement confirms: “Any ulcer present over four weeks is a cause for concern, as it is associated with worse outcome including amputation.” HBOT, in conjunction with comprehensive wound care, improves the odds of healing, achieving a significant improvement in amputation-free survival.3 Patients at the HTC receive intensive monitoring with glucose checks, daily wound care, and surgical wound debridement as needed.
Cancer survivors who have received radiation therapy may also benefit from HBOT. The late effects of radiation therapy include radiation cystitis, proctitis, osteoradionecrosis and other soft tissue necrosis. About half of patients requiring oral surgery after high dose radiation therapy have complications including delayed healing, wound infection, and dehiscence. This risk can be diminished four-fold with the use of adjunct HBOT.4 Other approved indications for HBOT include refractory osteomyelitis, acute traumatic peripheral ischemia, crush injuries, necrotizing fasciitis, skin grafts and actinomycosis. Providers are encouraged to talk with hyperbaric physicians at the HTC, available 24/7, to discuss potential patients (587-3425).
The logistics of treating patients living outside Honolulu are considerable but not insurmountable. Over a third of emergency cases are transferred from neighbor islands. Patients with elective conditions for HBOT (e.g. diabetic foot ulcer) have no restrictions on air travel, and typically remain on Oahu for their weekday treatments, returning home on the weekends. New patients receive a telehealth consultation, and educational videos orient the patient to the chamber environment and teach techniques of ear pressure equalization.
The sustainability of the HTC, for economic viability and maintaining the unique skills of the hyperbaric staff, is dependent upon community referrals for wound care and elective HBOT. However, due to the high cost of maintaining 24/7 availability of a free-standing facility, there remain substantial costs that are not covered by clinical revenue. Philanthropic support of the HTC through the University of Hawaii Foundation is encouraged. Members of the dive community remain philosophically supportive, but commercial dive operators have been hard hit financially by the pandemic. Appreciation and funding for our multiplace chamber facility and uniquely skilled staff cannot be subject to chance and circumstance. This essential emergency service and public health resource – a jewel of Hawai’i – deserves substantial and durable support from our government.
REFERENCES
1. Moon RE. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy indications. 14th edition. ed. North Palm Beach, FL: Best Pub. Co.; 2019.
2. Chin W, Jacoby L, Simon O, et al. Hyperbaric programs in the United States: Locations and capabilities of treating decompression sickness, arterial gas embolisms, and acute carbon monoxide poisoning: survey results. Undersea Hyperb Med 2016;43:29-43.
3. Liu R, Li L, Yang M, Boden G, Yang G. Systematic review of the effectiveness of hyperbaric oxygenation therapy in the management of chronic diabetic foot ulcers. Mayo Clinic Proceedings; 2013: Elsevier. p. 166-75.
4. Marx RE, Johnson RP, Kline SN. Prevention of osteoradionecrosis: a randomized prospective clinical trial of hyperbaric oxygen versus penicillin. Journal of the American Dental Association (1939) 1985;111:49.