1. Outcomes Among Patients Referred to Outpatient Rehabilitation Clinics After COVID-19 diagnosis - United States, January 2020-March 2021.
- Author
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Rogers-Brown, Jessica S., Wanga, Valentine, Okoro, Catherine, Brozowsky, Diane, Evans, Alan, Hopwood, David, Cope, Jennifer R., Jackson, Brendan R., Bushman, Dena, Hernandez-Romieu, Alfonso C., Bonacci, Robert A., McLeod, Tim, Chevinsky, Jennifer R., Goodman, Alyson B., Dixson, Meredith G., Lufty, Caitlyn, Rushmore, Julie, Koumans, Emily, Morris, Sapna Bamrah, and Thompson, William
- Subjects
COVID-19 testing ,SOMATIZATION disorder ,MEDICAL personnel ,COVID-19 - Abstract
As of June 30, 2021, 33.5 million persons in the United States had received a diagnosis of COVID-19 (1). Although most patients infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, recover within a few weeks, some experience post-COVID-19 conditions. These range from new or returning to ongoing health problems that can continue beyond 4 weeks. Persons who were asymptomatic at the time of infection can also experience post-COVID-19 conditions. Data on post-COVID-19 conditions are emerging and information on rehabilitation needs among persons recovering from COVID-19 is limited. Using data acquired during January 2020-March 2021 from Select Medical* outpatient rehabilitation clinics, CDC compared patient-reported measures of health, physical endurance, and health care use between patients who had recovered from COVID-19 (post-COVID-19 patients) and patients needing rehabilitation because of a current or previous diagnosis of a neoplasm (cancer) who had not experienced COVID-19 (control patients). All patients had been referred to outpatient rehabilitation. Compared with control patients, post-COVID-19 patients had higher age- and sex-adjusted odds of reporting worse physical health (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 1.8), pain (aOR = 2.3), and difficulty with physical activities (aOR = 1.6). Post-COVID-19 patients also had worse physical endurance, measured by the 6-minute walk test† (6MWT) (p<0.001) compared with control patients. Among patients referred to outpatient rehabilitation, those recovering from COVID-19 had poorer physical health and functional status than those who had cancer, or were recovering from cancer but not COVID-19. Patients recovering from COVID-19 might need additional clinical support, including tailored physical and mental health rehabilitation services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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