Characterizing non-critically ill COVID-19 survivors with and without in-hospital rehabilitation

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作者
Benjamin Musheyev
Rebeca Janowicz
Lara Borg
Michael Matarlo
Hayle Boyle
Wei Hou
Tim Q. Duong
机构
[1] Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine,Department of Radiology
[2] Stony Brook University,Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University
[3] Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook Medicine,Department of Physical and Occupational Therapy
[4] Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University,Department of Family, Population and Preventative Medicine
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This study investigated pre-COVID-19 admission dependency, discharge assistive equipment, discharge medical follow-up recommendation, and functional status at hospital discharge of non-critically ill COVID-19 survivors, stratified by those with (N = 155) and without (N = 162) in-hospital rehabilitation. “Mental Status”, intensive-care-unit (ICU) Mobility, and modified Barthel Index scores were assessed at hospital discharge. Relative to the non-rehabilitation patients, rehabilitation patients were older, had more comorbidities, worse pre-admission dependency, were discharged with more assistive equipment and supplemental oxygen, spent more days in the hospital, and had more hospital-acquired acute kidney injury, acute respiratory failure, and more follow-up referrals (p < 0.05 for all). Cardiology, vascular medicine, urology, and endocrinology were amongst the top referrals. Functional scores of many non-critically ill COVID-19 survivors were abnormal at discharge (p < 0.05) and were associated with pre-admission dependency (p < 0.05). Some functional scores were negatively correlated with age, hypertension, coronary artery disease, chronic kidney disease, psychiatric disease, anemia, and neurological disorders (p < 0.05). In-hospital rehabilitation providing restorative therapies and assisting discharge planning were challenging in COVID-19 circumstances. Knowledge of the functional status, discharge assistive equipment, and follow-up medical recommendations at discharge could enable appropriate and timely post-discharge care. Follow-up studies of COVID-19 survivors are warranted as many will likely have significant post-acute COVID-19 sequela.
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