1. Clinician perceptions of research priorities for the management of noncritically ill patients admitted to hospital with SARS‐CoV‐2 infection.
- Author
-
Bandara, Methma M., Barina, Lauren A., McPhee, Grace M., Goulding, Susan R., Denholm, Justin T., Morpeth, Susan C., Tong, Steven Y. C., Basnet, Bhupendra K., Bowen, Asha C., Hammond, Naomi E., Jha, Vivekanand, Jones, Mark, McQuilten, Zoe K., Mora, Jocelyn M., Nguyen, Vi, O'Sullivan, Matthew V. N., Paterson, David L., Price, David J., Rees, Megan A., and Snelling, Thomas L.
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,COVID-19 ,RESEARCH evaluation ,PRIORITY (Philosophy) ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,IMMUNOCOMPROMISED patients ,CROSS infection ,DISEASE incidence ,ANTIVIRAL agents ,AUSTRALASIANS ,SEVERITY of illness index ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HEALTH attitudes ,DISEASE prevalence ,CRITICAL care medicine ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT care ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,PHENOTYPES - Abstract
The changing phenotype of coronarvirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) may quickly render guideline‐recommended interventions obsolete. We developed a 40‐question clinician survey in consultation with the Australasian COVID‐19 Trial site investigators. The survey was designed to assess clinician perceptions of the current treatment strategies and future research priorities in the management of non‐critically ill patients admitted to hospital with SARS‐CoV‐2 infection. There were 84 complete responses from predominantly Australian and New Zealand clinicians. The perceived prevalence of patients with incidental COVID‐19, nosocomial infection, underlying illness exacerbated by COVID‐19, and/or immunocompromised status suggests new populations to target. The results highlighted clinician interest in antiviral therapies for future research in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised cohorts. These survey results underscore the need for ongoing surveillance of COVID‐19 disease phenotypes and clinician and patient priorities for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF