1. Characteristics and outcomes of hospitalized adults with COVID-19 in Nepal: a multicenter, prospective cohort study
- Author
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Pramod Paudel, Sarbesh Sharma, Samikchya Baskota, Sher Bahadur Kamar, Sanjay K. Jaiswal, Hem Raj Pandey, Jagadish Joshi, Shree Ram Tiwari, Ramesh Joshi, Kamal Khadka, Uday Narayan Singh, Kamar Hasan Ansari, Arjun Prasad Tiwari, Ashok Chaudhary, Niresh Thapa, and Prameshwar Kumar Sah
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Population ,Context (language use) ,Disease ,Asymptomatic ,Microbiology ,Nepal ,Internal medicine ,Virology ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Clinical course ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Hospitalization ,Oxygen ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
IntroductionThere is limited data on clinical course and outcomes of hospitalized adults with COVID-19 in Nepal. Thus, it is imperative to characterize the features of this disease in the domestic context.MethodologyWe identified all adult patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 admitted to five different hospitals in Nepal from June 15 to July 15, 2020. We collected epidemiological, socio-cultural and clinicopathologic data, and stratified the patients based on their symptom status.ResultsThe study included 220 patients with an overall median age of 31.5 (25-37) years, and 181 (82.3%) were males. 159 (72.3%) were asymptomatic, and 163 (74.1%) were imported cases. Of 217 patients with the available data, 110 (50.7%) reported their annual household income less than 2000 US dollars, and 122 (56.2%) practiced Pranayama (yogic rhythmic breathing techniques) regularly. Eight patients (3.6%) required supplemental oxygen and two patients (0.9%) died. None of the patients who practiced Pranayama regularly required supplemental oxygen. Compared to asymptomatic patients, symptomatic patients had greater proportion of females (31.1% vs. 12.6%, p=0.001), imported cases (85.2% vs. 69.8%, p=0.02), illiterates (26.8% vs. 12.1%, p=0.01), alcohol users (43.3% vs. 24.5%, p=0.01), patients feeling stigmatized by society (45.8% vs. 22.6%, p=0.001), and had higher platelet count (253× 109/L vs. 185×109/L, p=0.02).ConclusionsMost cases were imported, asymptomatic young males, with very few deaths. Pranayama practice was associated with protection against severe COVID-19, but more data is needed to substantiate this. The association of platelets count with symptom status in the Nepalese population needs further exploration.
- Published
- 2020