Impact of preemptive hospitalization on health outcomes at the temporary COVID-19 hospital in Mexico City: a prospective observational study.

Rafael Ricardo Valdez Vazquez; Héctor Gallardo-Rincón ORCID logo; Julieta Lomelín-Gascon; Rodrigo Ville Benavides ORCID logo; Linda Morales Juárez; Héctor Herrera Bello; Lidia Moreno Castañeda; Adrian Palacios Chavarria; Pablo Escalera Castillo; Luis Esteban Ramirez Gonzalez; +16 more... Mónica Arboleya Avendaño; Santiago Treviño Berlanga; Reyna Albertina Rosas Loza; Renate Victoria Álvarez Wyssmann; Erika Salinas Lezama; Alonso Gutiérrez Romero; María Dolores Niembro Ortega; Liudmila Villegas Acosta; Ailyn Cendejas Schotman; Jennifer Bertin Montoya; Andrea Gonzalez Rodriguez; Laura María Badel Ramos; Luis Alberto Martinez-Juarez ORCID logo; Rodrigo Saucedo-Martínez; Alejandra Montoya; Roberto Tapia-Conyer; (2021) Impact of preemptive hospitalization on health outcomes at the temporary COVID-19 hospital in Mexico City: a prospective observational study. Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease, 8. 20499361211040325-. ISSN 2049-9361 DOI: 10.1177/20499361211040325
Copy

INTRODUCTION: In response to the evolution of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the admission protocol for the temporary COVID-19 hospital in Mexico City has been updated to hospitalize patients preemptively with an oxygen saturation (SpO2) of >90%. METHODS: This prospective, observational, single-center study compared the progression and outcomes of patients who were preemptively hospitalized versus those who were hospitalized based on an SpO2 ⩽90%. We recorded patient demographics, clinical characteristics, COVID-19 symptoms, and oxygen requirement at admission. We calculated the risk of disease progression and the benefit of preemptive hospitalization, stratified by CALL Score: age, lymphocyte count, and lactate dehydrogenase (<8 and ⩾8) at admission. RESULTS: Preemptive hospitalization significantly reduced the requirement for oxygen therapy (odds ratio 0.45, 95% confidence interval 0.31-0.66), admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) (0.37, 0.23-0.60), requirement for invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) (0.40, 0.25-0.64), and mortality (0.22, 0.10-0.50). Stratification by CALL score at admission showed that the benefit of preemptive hospitalization remained significant for patients requiring oxygen therapy (0.51, 0.31-0.83), admission to the ICU (0.48, 0.27-0.86), and IMV (0.51, 0.28-0.92). Mortality risk remained significantly reduced (0.19, 0.07-0.48). CONCLUSION: Preemptive hospitalization reduced the rate of disease progression and may be beneficial for improving COVID-19 patient outcomes.


picture_as_pdf
Vazquez_etal_2021_Impact-of-preemptive-hospitalization-on.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads