| Literature DB >> 34734378 |
Salah T Al Awaidy1, Faryal Khamis2, Badria Al Rashidi3, Ahmed H Al Wahaibi3, Abdulrahim Albahri4, Ozayr Mahomed5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the epidemiological characteristics of the first 69,382 patients with COVID-19 infection in Oman.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Epidemiological characteristics; Oman; Pandemic; SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34734378 PMCID: PMC8335985 DOI: 10.1007/s44197-021-00001-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol Glob Health ISSN: 2210-6006
Demographic characteristics of Oman’s COVID-19 patients
| Characteristic, | Full cases series | Non-hospitalized | Hospitalized | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | ||||
| 0–9 years | 3170 (5%) | 1994 (63%) | 1176 (37%) | |
| 10–19 | 3056 (4%) | 2831 (93%) | 225 (7%) | |
| 20–29 | 15,678 (23%) | 14,949 (95%) | 729 (5%) | |
| 30–39 | 29,102 (42%) | 27,606 (95%) | 1496 (5%) | |
| 40–49 | 11,017 (16%) | 9591 (87%) | 1426 (13%) | |
| 50 + | 7359 (11%) | 3451 (47%) | 3908 (53%) | |
| Female | 17,991 (26%) | 14,992 (83%) | 2999 (17%) | < 0.001 |
| Male | 51,391 (74%) | 45,430 (88%) | 5961 (12%) | |
| Omani | 40,859 (59%) | 34,250 (84%) | 6609 (16%) | < 0.001 |
| Non-Omanib | 28,523 (41%) | 26,172 (92%) | 2351 (8%) | |
| Died | 359 (0.5%) | – | – | |
| Recovered | 47,909 (69.1%) | |||
| Active cases | 21,114 (30.4%) | |||
| Muscat | 36,366 (52.4%)(2558a) | – | – | |
| North Al Batinah | 10,968 (15.8%)(1402a) | – | – | |
| South Al Batinah | 7844 (11.3%)(1792a) | – | – | |
| Al Dakhiliyah | 4063 (5.9%)(837a) | – | – | |
| Dhofar | 2608 (3.8%)(577a) | – | – | |
| South Ash Sharqiyah | 2074 (3%)(647a) | – | – | |
| North Ash Sharqiyah | 1767 (2.5%)(622a) | – | – | |
| Al Wusta | 1556 (2.2%)(3151a) | – | – | |
| Adh Dhahirah | 1321 (2%)(591a) | – | – | |
| Al Buraimi | 769 (1.1%)(655a) | – | – | |
| Musandam | 46 (0.1%)(101a) | – | – |
SD standard deviation
aRate/100,000
bNon-Omani included 22.1% (n = 15,361) from Indian, 12.8% (n = 8905) from Bangladeshi, 2.8% (n = 1919) from Pakistani, 0.8% (n = 561) from Nepalees, 0.6% (n = 429) from Egyptian, 0.5% (n = 355) from Filipino, 0.3% (n = 212) from Sri Lankan, 0.1% (n = 77) from Syrian, 0.1% (n = 72) from Tanzanian, 0.9% (n = 632) from others
Fig. 1Laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases in Oman from 23 February to 30 July 2020
Fig. 2Rates of COVID-19 per 100,000 by governorates (provinces)
Fig. 3Frequency distribution of COVID-19 cases by age categories and gender
Fig. 4Distribution of COVID-19 cases by nationality
Fig. 5Symptoms of COVID-19 patients on diagnosis (N = 69,382)
Mortality of all COVID-19 cases, Oman
| Characteristic, | Recovered | Dead | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | Male | Female | |||
| Gender | 37,007 | 10,902 | 278 | 81 | ||
| Age mean (SD) | 34 (13) | 33 (17) | 1.00 | 55 (17) | 64 (18) | < 0.001* |
| Omani Nationals | 14,597 | 9398 | < 0.001 | 133 | 73 | < 0.001 |
| Non-Omani | 22,410 | 1504 | 145 | 8 | ||
| Muscat | 23,189 | 5698 | 151 | 34 | ||
| North Al Batinah | 3710 | 1719 | 49 | 20 | ||
| South Al Batinah | 3065 | 1641 | 42 | 12 | ||
| AL Dakhiliyah | 1695 | 731 | 10 | 4 | ||
| Dhofar | 1247 | 64 | 6 | 2 | ||
| South Al Sharqiyah | 1049 | 383 | 9 | 7 | ||
| North Ash Sharqiyah | 633 | 330 | 2 | 0 | ||
| AL Wusta | 1379 | 9 | 1 | 0 | ||
| Adh Dhahirah | 596 | 202 | 1 | 1 | ||
| AL Buraimi | 413 | 123 | 7 | 1 | ||
| Musandam | 31 | 2 | 0 | 0 | ||
Demographic characteristics of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Oman. Stratified by intensive care unit (ICU) admission
| Characteristic, | All | Non-ICU | ICU | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 44.4 (23.8) | 43.3 (24.3) | 51.7 (19.2) | |
| < 20 years | 1401 (16%) | 1336 (95%) | 65 (5%) | < 0.001 |
| 20–39 years | 2225 (25%) | 1990 (89%) | 235 (11%) | |
| 40 years and above | 5334 (60%) | 4445 (83%) | 889 (17%) | |
| Female | 2999 (33%) | 2689 (90%) | 310 (10%) | < 0.001 |
| Male | 5961 (67%) | 5082 (85%) | 879 (15%) | |
| Omani | 6609 (74%) | 5846 (88%) | 763 (12%) | < 0.001 |
| Non-Omanib | 2351 (26%) | 1925 (82%) | 426 (18%) | |
| Muscat | 2960 (33%) | 2535 (85.6%) | 425 (14.4%) | – |
| North Al Batinah | 1311 (14.6%) | 1159 (88.4%) | 152 (11.6%) | |
| Dhofar | 1175 (13.1%) | 1016 (86.5%) | 159 (13.5%) | |
| South Al Batinah | 968 (10.8%) | 850 (87.8%) | 118 (12.2%) | |
| Al Dakhiliyah | 849 (9.5%) | 609 (71.7%) | 240 (28.3%) | |
| South Ash Sharqiyah | 548 (6.1%) | 496 (90.5%) | 52 (9.5%) | |
| North Ash Sharqiyah | 385 (4.3%) | 368 (95.6%) | 17 (4.4%) | |
| Adh Dhahirah | 291 (3.2%) | 277 (95.2%) | 14 (4.8%) | |
| Al Buraimi | 234 (2.6%) | 222 (94.9%) | 12 (5.1%) | |
| Al Wusta | 185 (2.1%) | 185 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| Musandam | 54 (0.6%) | 54 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| Average (SD) | 2.1 (2.9) | 1.9 (2.6) | 3.1 (4.2) | |
| 0–3 days | 7430 (83%) | 6570 (88%) | 860 (12%) | < 0.001 |
| 4–7 days | 1092 (12%) | 901 (83%) | 191 (17%) | |
| 8+ days | 438 (5%) | 300 (68%) | 138 (32%) |
SD standard deviation
aRate/100,000
bNon-Omani included 11.4% (n = 1017) from Bangladeshi, 7.9% (n = 706) from Indian, 2.9% (n = 259) from Pakistani, 0.9% (n = 82) from Yemeni, 0.9% (n = 81) from Egyptian, 0.4% (n = 36) from Filipino, 0.2% (n = 18) from Syrian, 0.2% (n = 16) from Sudanese, 0.2% (n = 15) from Nepalees, 0.1% (n = 13) from Tanzanian, 1.2% (n = 108) from others
Fig. 6Non-pharmaceutical interventions implemented along with the dates of various strategies to minimize its spread in Oman