TheScientist, by Lisa Winter: A new study published April 22 in the Journal of the American Medical Association characterizes the symptoms, comorbidities, and clinical outcomes of 5,700 patients hospitalized because of COVID-19 in the New York area. The authors found that 94 percent of the patients had a chronic health problem, and 88 percent had two or more. The three most prevalent conditions were hypertension (56.6 percent), obesity (41.7 percent), and diabetes (33.8 percent).
The study followed patients confirmed to have COVID-19 between March 1 and April 4, spanning 12 New York City–area hospitals. Patients ranged from babies to centenarians with a median age of 63. Around 40 percent of them were female.
The findings were observational of patients with severe illness and the health conditions correlated with these patients do not necessarily apply to all COVID-19 cases or represent causation.
“We’re simply describing the patients who came in and required hospitalization,” senior author Karina Davidson, a senior vice president at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, tells The New York Times. “We are not comparing them to those who were positive and stayed out of the hospital, or who didn’t get infected, or to patients with any other disease.”
Although the World Health Organization lists fever as a common symptom of COVID-19, the study found that around two-thirds of the patients “did not have a fever and yet were sick enough to need to be hospitalized,” Davidson tells Newsday. “That’s the kind of important finding we thought needs to get out right away.”
A total of 1,151 patients were put on ventilators during their hospitalization. Of those, 831 remained intubated at the end of the study, 282 patients died, and 38 were discharged. None of the patients under 20 years old died, and men died at a higher rate than women. Forty-five patients were re-admitted after being discharged from the hospital after an average of three days at home.
The authors admit there are many limitations to the study including the length of observation, the geographic area, incomplete medical records, and a lack of control group. Still, they say, this is a beginning to accurately characterizing COVID-19 in patients.
“Is there any pattern of symptoms that predicts a worse outcome or predicts people are in fact going to be safe and can be managed at home?” Davidson tells NBC News. “We think that’s the burning question.”
Our Comments:
Having one or more chronic conditions—such as obesity, hypertension, or type 2 diabetes—seems to be a major predictor in the severity of COVID-19 cases. Interestingly, animal products can contribute to the increase of chronic diseases due to the inflammatory nature of these foods and the fact that they contain high amounts of animal protein, saturated fat, and cholesterol. Thus, eating a plant-based diet, which has been shown to help prevent and even reverse many chronic conditions—might have the added benefit of helping us avoid severe infectious illnesses.
Prophetic Link:
“Those foods should be chosen that best supply the elements needed for building up the body. In this choice, appetite is not a safe guide. Through wrong habits of eating, the appetite has become perverted. Often it demands food that impairs health and causes weakness instead of strength. We cannot safely be guided by the customs of society. The disease and suffering that everywhere prevail are largely due to popular errors in regard to diet.” Ministry of Healing, p. 295
Nature Knows Best!
Comments
Brian Fort
Saturday May 2nd, 2020 at 01:25 AMOnly diabetes is perhaps a predictor of the severity of Covid19, because the percentages given for hypertension and obesity fall in line with national percentages. Around %50 have hypertension and 40% are obese. Only %9 have diabetes, but since they are combining those who also have more than just diabetes, well perhaps it isn’t the diabetes.
But yes I’m in total agreement about dietary intake contributing to maximizing our ability to fight off all manner of diseases.