| Literature DB >> 33496664 |
Alexander T Janke1, Hao Mei2, Craig Rothenberg1, Robert D Becher3, Zhenqiu Lin2, Arjun K Venkatesh1,2.
Abstract
Although the impact of COVID-19 has varied greatly across the United States, there has been little assessment of hospital resources and mortality. We examine hospital resources and death counts among hospital referral regions from March 1 to July 26, 2020. This was an analysis of American Hospital Association data with COVID-19 data from the New York Times. Hospital-based resource availabilities were characterized per COVID-19 case. Death count was defined by monthly confirmed COVID-19 deaths. Geographic areas with fewer intensive care unit beds (incident rate ratio [IRR], 0.194; 95% CI, 0.076-0.491), nurses (IRR, 0.927; 95% CI, 0.888-0.967), and general medicine/surgical beds (IRR, 0.800; 95% CI, 0.696-0.920) per COVID-19 case were statistically significantly associated with an increased incidence rate of death in April 2020. This underscores the potential impact of innovative hospital capacity protocols and care models to create resource flexibility to limit system overload early in a pandemic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33496664 PMCID: PMC8025594 DOI: 10.12788/jhm.3539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hosp Med ISSN: 1553-5592 Impact factor: 2.960