Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region

Background: This first report of the Linköping Covid-19 Study (LinCoS) aimed at determination of Covid-19-associated mortality, impairments, activity and participation limitations denoting rehabilitation needs four months after discharge from hospital. Methods: An ambidirectional population-based co...

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Main Authors: Anestis Divanoglou, PT, PhD, Assoc. Prof Kersti Samuelsson, OT, PhD, Prof. Emer. Rune Sjödahl, MD, PhD, Christer Andersson, MD, PhD, Prof. Richard Levi, MD, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:EClinicalMedicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537021002005
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spelling doaj-12226069f4714880ba1fc3bfed7881aa2021-06-01T04:24:08ZengElsevierEClinicalMedicine2589-53702021-06-0136100920Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare regionAnestis Divanoglou, PT, PhD0Assoc. Prof Kersti Samuelsson, OT, PhD1Prof. Emer. Rune Sjödahl, MD, PhD2Christer Andersson, MD, PhD3Prof. Richard Levi, MD, PhD4Department of Rehabilitation Medicine and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring sciences, Linköping University, S-58185, Linköping, Sweden; Corresponding authors. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University Hospital, S-58185 Linköping, Sweden. Tel.: +46 (0)10103 00 00.Department of Rehabilitation Medicine and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring sciences, Linköping University, S-58185, Linköping, SwedenDepartment of Surgery and Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Linköping University, S-58185, Linköping, SwedenDepartment of Orthopedics, Linköping University Hospital, S-58185, Linköping, SwedenDepartment of Rehabilitation Medicine and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring sciences, Linköping University, S-58185, Linköping, Sweden; Corresponding authors. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University Hospital, S-58185 Linköping, Sweden. Tel.: +46 (0)10103 00 00.Background: This first report of the Linköping Covid-19 Study (LinCoS) aimed at determination of Covid-19-associated mortality, impairments, activity and participation limitations denoting rehabilitation needs four months after discharge from hospital. Methods: An ambidirectional population-based cohort study including all confirmed Covid-19 cases admitted to hospital during 1/03-31/05 and those living in home healthcare settings identified through a regional registry and evaluated through medical records, including WHO Clinical Progression Scale (CPS). All patients discharged from hospital were followed-up by structured telephone interview at 4 months post-discharge. Respondents indicated any new or aggravated persisting problems in any of 25 body functions and 12 activity/participation items and rated them for impact on daily life. Findings: Out of 734 hospitalised patients, 149 were excluded, 125 died, and 460 were alive at 4-month follow-up of whom 433 (94.1%) were interviewed. In total, 40% reported impairments and activity/participation limitations affecting daily life and warranted further multi-professional rehabilitation assessment, predominantly those with severe disease and a considerable proportion of those with moderate disease. Cognitive and affective impairments were equally common in all groups and were reported by 20-40% of cases. Limb weakness was reported by 31%, with CPS 7-9 being four times more likely to report this problem as compared to CPS 4-5. 26% of those working or studying reported difficulties returning to these activities, this being 3.5 times more likely in CPS 7-9 as compared to CPS 4-5. 25% reported problems walking >1 km, with CPS 7-9 over three times more likely to report this as compared to the other two sub-groups. 90-day mortality rate of Covid-19 associated deaths was 15.1%. Interpretation: Most rehabilitation needs after Covid-19 involved higher cerebral dysfunction both in patients with moderate and severe disease. This should be considered when designing services aiming at minimizing long-term disability. Funding: ALF grant and Region Östergötland.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537021002005
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anestis Divanoglou, PT, PhD
Assoc. Prof Kersti Samuelsson, OT, PhD
Prof. Emer. Rune Sjödahl, MD, PhD
Christer Andersson, MD, PhD
Prof. Richard Levi, MD, PhD
spellingShingle Anestis Divanoglou, PT, PhD
Assoc. Prof Kersti Samuelsson, OT, PhD
Prof. Emer. Rune Sjödahl, MD, PhD
Christer Andersson, MD, PhD
Prof. Richard Levi, MD, PhD
Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region
EClinicalMedicine
author_facet Anestis Divanoglou, PT, PhD
Assoc. Prof Kersti Samuelsson, OT, PhD
Prof. Emer. Rune Sjödahl, MD, PhD
Christer Andersson, MD, PhD
Prof. Richard Levi, MD, PhD
author_sort Anestis Divanoglou, PT, PhD
title Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region
title_short Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region
title_full Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region
title_fullStr Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region
title_full_unstemmed Rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the Covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a Swedish healthcare region
title_sort rehabilitation needs and mortality associated with the covid-19 pandemic: a population-based study of all hospitalised and home-healthcare individuals in a swedish healthcare region
publisher Elsevier
series EClinicalMedicine
issn 2589-5370
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Background: This first report of the Linköping Covid-19 Study (LinCoS) aimed at determination of Covid-19-associated mortality, impairments, activity and participation limitations denoting rehabilitation needs four months after discharge from hospital. Methods: An ambidirectional population-based cohort study including all confirmed Covid-19 cases admitted to hospital during 1/03-31/05 and those living in home healthcare settings identified through a regional registry and evaluated through medical records, including WHO Clinical Progression Scale (CPS). All patients discharged from hospital were followed-up by structured telephone interview at 4 months post-discharge. Respondents indicated any new or aggravated persisting problems in any of 25 body functions and 12 activity/participation items and rated them for impact on daily life. Findings: Out of 734 hospitalised patients, 149 were excluded, 125 died, and 460 were alive at 4-month follow-up of whom 433 (94.1%) were interviewed. In total, 40% reported impairments and activity/participation limitations affecting daily life and warranted further multi-professional rehabilitation assessment, predominantly those with severe disease and a considerable proportion of those with moderate disease. Cognitive and affective impairments were equally common in all groups and were reported by 20-40% of cases. Limb weakness was reported by 31%, with CPS 7-9 being four times more likely to report this problem as compared to CPS 4-5. 26% of those working or studying reported difficulties returning to these activities, this being 3.5 times more likely in CPS 7-9 as compared to CPS 4-5. 25% reported problems walking >1 km, with CPS 7-9 over three times more likely to report this as compared to the other two sub-groups. 90-day mortality rate of Covid-19 associated deaths was 15.1%. Interpretation: Most rehabilitation needs after Covid-19 involved higher cerebral dysfunction both in patients with moderate and severe disease. This should be considered when designing services aiming at minimizing long-term disability. Funding: ALF grant and Region Östergötland.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589537021002005
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