Thippaiah Srinagesh Mannekote, Levitt Gwen, Bains Supreet, Pandurangi Ananda, Ramos Gilbert, Bhattarai Bikash, Olson Carol
The University of Arizona College of Medicine - Phoenix, Creighton University School of Medicine-Phoenix, Valleywise Health Medical Center, 2601 E Roosevelt St, Phoenix, AZ, 85008, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Valleywise Health Medical Center, Creighton University School of Medicine, 2601 E Roosevelt St, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Heliyon. 2023 Aug 30;9(9):e19372. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19372. eCollection 2023 Sep.
SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) infection can be associated with significant medical complications. This risk could be even higher in psychiatric patients due to an increased risk of medical co-morbidity. In addition, psychiatric patients are also vulnerable to acquiring SARS-CoV2 infection due to homelessness, living in crowded areas, and poor adherence to recommended preventive measures. This retrospective study aims to compare two groups of patients, namely COVID-19 positive inpatient psychiatric patients with and without preexisting medical comorbidity on specific clinical and socio-demographic features and more importantly how many patients in the two groups subsequently developed medical complications. All COVID-19 positive psychiatric patients who were admitted to acute psychiatric inpatient units over a one-year period during the peri-pandemic phase were included for this study. Data was collected from the electronic medical records of 174 patients admitted to the inpatient psychiatric facility between January and December 2020. Among the COVID-19 positive patients, twenty individuals out of eighty-nine in the WC (with pre-existing medical comorbidity) group and two individuals out of eighty-five in the WOC (without pre-existing medical comorbidity) group developed COVID-related pneumonia. Ten WC patients and two WOC patients required supplemental oxygen, while only one patient in the WC group developed critical illness and required ventilatory support. The WC group had longer stay in both psychiatric and medical units compared to the WOC group. Consistent with existing literature that patients with comorbid medical condition are higher risk of COVID-19 complications, this study replicates the finding that in psychiatric inpatients pre-existing comorbid medical conditions create a higher risk of experiencing COVID-19 related medical complications. More interestingly, however that increased risk of developing new medical complications was not significantly different from the published rates observed in the general population which is surprising given how vulnerable psychiatric patients are, both medical, psychiatrically and psychosocially. In fact, in some ways and for reasons as yet unclear, the medical complication rate was slightly better in the WC compared to published data in the general population groups.
严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2,即新冠病毒)感染可能会引发严重的医学并发症。由于合并其他疾病的风险增加,这种风险在精神科患者中可能更高。此外,精神科患者还容易感染SARS-CoV-2,原因包括无家可归、居住在拥挤地区以及对推荐的预防措施依从性差。这项回顾性研究旨在比较两组患者,即患有和未患有合并症的新冠病毒阳性住院精神科患者的特定临床和社会人口学特征,更重要的是比较两组中随后出现医学并发症的患者数量。本研究纳入了在疫情流行期的一年时间内入住急性精神科住院病房的所有新冠病毒阳性精神科患者。数据收集自2020年1月至12月期间入住精神科住院设施的174例患者的电子病历。在新冠病毒阳性患者中,有合并症(WC)组的89例中有20例、无合并症(WOC)组的85例中有2例发生了新冠相关肺炎。10例WC组患者和2例WOC组患者需要吸氧,而WC组只有1例患者发展为危重症并需要通气支持。与WOC组相比,WC组在精神科和内科病房的住院时间更长。与现有文献一致,即合并其他疾病的患者发生新冠病毒并发症的风险更高,本研究再次发现,在精神科住院患者中,既往存在的合并症会增加发生新冠病毒相关医学并发症的风险。然而,更有趣的是,出现新的医学并发症的风险增加与普通人群中观察到的已发表发生率并无显著差异,鉴于精神科患者在医学、精神和社会心理方面都非常脆弱,这一点令人惊讶。事实上,在某些方面,原因尚不清楚,WC组的医学并发症发生率与普通人群组的已发表数据相比略好。