Survival Impact of an On-Site Medicalization Program in the Control of COVID-19 Outbreaks in 11 Nursing Homes

Author:

Baron-Franco Bosco1,Ollero-Baturone Manuel1,Ternero-Vega Jara Eloísa1,Nieto-Martín Maria Dolores1,Moreno-Gaviño Lourdes1,Conde-Guzmán Concepcion1,Gutiérrez-Rivero Sonia1,Rincón-Gómez Manuel1,Díaz-Jiménez Pablo1,Muñoz-Lopez Juan José2,Giménez-Miranda Luis1ORCID,Fernández-Nieto Celia1,Bernabeu-Wittel Máximo13

Affiliation:

1. Internal Medicine Department, University Hospital Virgen del Rocío, 41013 Seville, Spain

2. Internal Medicine Department, Hospital Alta Resolución de Utrera, 41710 Seville, Spain

3. Department of Medicine, University of Seville, 41004 Seville, Spain

Abstract

Background: The elderly admitted to nursing homes have especially suffered the havoc of the COVID-19 pandemic since most of them are not prepared to face such health problems. Methods: An innovative coordinated on-site medicalization program (MP) in response to a sizeable COVID-19 outbreak in three consecutive waves was deployed, sharing coordination and resources among primary care, the referral hospital, and the eleven residences. The objectives were providing the best possible medical care to residents in their environment, avoiding dehumanization and loneliness of hospital admission, and reducing the saturation of hospitals and the risk of spreading the infection. The main outcomes were a composite endpoint of survival or optimal palliative care (SOPC), survival, and referral to the hospital. Results: 587 of 1199 (49%) residents were infected, of whom 123 (21%) died. Patients diagnosed before the start of the MP presented SOPC, survival, and referrals to the hospital of 83%, 74%, and 22.4%, opposite to 96%, 84%, and 10.6% of patients diagnosed while the MP was set up. The SOPC was independently associated with an MP (OR 3.4 [1.6–7.2]). Conclusion: During the COVID-19 outbreak, a coordinated MP successfully obtained a better rate of SOPC while simultaneously reducing the need for hospital admissions, combining optimal medical management with a more compassionate and humanistic approach in older people.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference37 articles.

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2. European Center for Disease Control and Prevention (2023, January 04). COVID-19 Situation Update for the EU/EEA, as of 1 July 2021. Available online: https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/cases-2019-ncov-eueea.

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