Comprehensive evaluation of COVID-19 patient short- and long-term outcomes: Disparities in healthcare utilization and post-hospitalization outcomes

Understanding risk factors for short- and long-term COVID-19 outcomes have implications for current guidelines and practice. We study whether early identified risk factors for COVID-19 persist one year later and through varying disease progression trajectories. This was a retrospective study of 6,73...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-10, Vol.16 (10), p.e0258278
Hauptverfasser: Salerno, Stephen, Sun, Yuming, Morris, Emily L, He, Xinwei, Li, Yajing, Pan, Ziyang, Han, Peisong, Kang, Jian, Sjoding, Michael W, Li, Yi
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container_issue 10
container_start_page e0258278
container_title PloS one
container_volume 16
creator Salerno, Stephen
Sun, Yuming
Morris, Emily L
He, Xinwei
Li, Yajing
Pan, Ziyang
Han, Peisong
Kang, Jian
Sjoding, Michael W
Li, Yi
description Understanding risk factors for short- and long-term COVID-19 outcomes have implications for current guidelines and practice. We study whether early identified risk factors for COVID-19 persist one year later and through varying disease progression trajectories. This was a retrospective study of 6,731 COVID-19 patients presenting to Michigan Medicine between March 10, 2020 and March 10, 2021. We describe disease progression trajectories from diagnosis to potential hospital admission, discharge, readmission, or death. Outcomes pertained to all patients: rate of medical encounters, hospitalization-free survival, and overall survival, and hospitalized patients: discharge versus in-hospital death and readmission. Risk factors included patient age, sex, race, body mass index, and 29 comorbidity conditions. Younger, non-Black patients utilized healthcare resources at higher rates, while older, male, and Black patients had higher rates of hospitalization and mortality. Diabetes with complications, coagulopathy, fluid and electrolyte disorders, and blood loss anemia were risk factors for these outcomes. Diabetes with complications, coagulopathy, fluid and electrolyte disorders, and blood loss were associated with lower discharge and higher inpatient mortality rates. This study found differences in healthcare utilization and adverse COVID-19 outcomes, as well as differing risk factors for short- and long-term outcomes throughout disease progression. These findings may inform providers in emergency departments or critical care settings of treatment priorities, empower healthcare stakeholders with effective disease management strategies, and aid health policy makers in optimizing allocations of medical resources.
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We study whether early identified risk factors for COVID-19 persist one year later and through varying disease progression trajectories. This was a retrospective study of 6,731 COVID-19 patients presenting to Michigan Medicine between March 10, 2020 and March 10, 2021. We describe disease progression trajectories from diagnosis to potential hospital admission, discharge, readmission, or death. Outcomes pertained to all patients: rate of medical encounters, hospitalization-free survival, and overall survival, and hospitalized patients: discharge versus in-hospital death and readmission. Risk factors included patient age, sex, race, body mass index, and 29 comorbidity conditions. Younger, non-Black patients utilized healthcare resources at higher rates, while older, male, and Black patients had higher rates of hospitalization and mortality. Diabetes with complications, coagulopathy, fluid and electrolyte disorders, and blood loss anemia were risk factors for these outcomes. 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subjects Adult
Aged
Allocations
Anemia
Biology and Life Sciences
Blood
Body mass
Body mass index
Body size
Comorbidity
Complications
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
COVID-19 - epidemiology
COVID-19 - therapy
Demographic aspects
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus
Disease
Disorders
Emergency medical care
Emergency medical services
Epidemics
Ethnicity
Facilities and Services Utilization - statistics & numerical data
Female
Health care
Health care disparities
Health policy
Health Resources
Health risks
Health services utilization
Healthcare Disparities
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Humans
Lung Diseases
Male
Medical care
Medicine
Medicine and Health Sciences
Michigan - epidemiology
Middle Aged
Mortality
Pandemics
Patients
People and places
Physical Sciences
Retrospective Studies
Risk analysis
Risk Factors
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Social aspects
Supervision
Survival
Treatment Outcome
Utilization
Young Adult
title Comprehensive evaluation of COVID-19 patient short- and long-term outcomes: Disparities in healthcare utilization and post-hospitalization outcomes
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