| Literature DB >> 35492029 |
Sarah Cuschieri1, Stephan Grech2, Victor Grech2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic had a global impact. The study explores the various COVID-19 experiences in Malta over the past year and provides a snapshot of acute and post-acute COVID-19 symptoms, as well as national vaccination roll-out and hesitancy.Entities:
Keywords: Malta; community spread; coronavirus; morbidity; mortality; vaccines
Year: 2022 PMID: 35492029 PMCID: PMC9237496 DOI: 10.1017/dmp.2022.100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disaster Med Public Health Prep ISSN: 1935-7893 Impact factor: 5.556
Demographic characteristics of the survey population and those that acquired COVID-19
| Survey population by sex | Total ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 290 (28.05%) | |||
| Female | 739 (71.47%) | |||
| Prefer not to say | 5 (0.48%) |
Survey population that acquired COVID-19 by sex, age groups, education, districts and most common reported Covid-19 symptoms and post-acute Covid-19 symptoms
| Acquired COVID-19 survey cohort by age groups | Male ( | Female ( | CHI sq. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18-19 years | 1 (5.26%) | 3 (6.38%) | 0.3 |
| 20-29 years | 4 (21.05%) | 12 (25.53%) | |
| 30-39 years | 7 (36.84%) | 9 (19.15%) | |
| 40-49 years | 1 (5.26%) | 10 (21.28%) | |
| 50-59 years | 3 (15.79%) | 9 (19.15%) | |
| 60-69 years | 3 (15.79%) | 2 (4.26%) | |
| 70-79 years | 0.00% | 2 (4.26%) | |
| 80 years and above | 0.00% | 0.00% |
Different reasons for the reduced visits to the general practitioner as reported by the survey participants
| Male ( | Female ( | Chi | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concern to go out of house | 1.38% | 1.08% | 0.14 |
| Concern going to clinic/health centre | 2.41% | 9.74% | |
| Afraid of acquiring Covid19 | 7.24% | 4.87% | |
| Family doctor reduced his practice | 5.52% | 4.60% | |
| Had less sick days/No sick days | 12.07% | 13.94% | |
| Concerned going to clinic & afraid to acquire Covid19 | 6.55% | 7.98% | |
| Online GP services | 0.00% | 0.54% | |
| Afraid of acquiring Covid19 & family doctor reduced availability | 0.69% | 1.35% | |
| No concern | 0.00% | 0.14% |
Qualitative analyses outcome on the impact of the pandemic on behavioural habits among the survey participants
| Positive attitudes and outcomes | Negative attitudes and outcomes |
|---|---|
| Staying at home provided more time for self-care including increase in physical activity and eating healthy food | Increased sedentary lifestyle including increase in screen time |
| Increased frequency of walks to secluded country and sea-side areas | Staying more at home and decreased outdoor physical activity |
| Life slowed down providing more time to focus on physical activity | Increased time at home lead to an increased in food consumption |
| Shifted performance of physical activity performed from a professional gym to a home gym | Living with vulnerable people reduced the ability to leave the house for physical activity in fear of contracting the virus |
| Alcohol consumption reduced due to lack of social activities | Mandatory mask wearing hinder breathing capacity and halted physical activity outside the home |
| Became more conscious of one’s health status during the pandemic resulting in enhanced nutrition attention and performing of exercise | Fear of contracting the virus from gyms or from other physical activity classes/activities |
| Shifting to remote working/learning at home abolished the only physical activity performed during the day when working in office/ going to university | |
| Juggling home schooling and remote working decreased the time for self-care | |
| Decreased motivation for self-care and perform physical activities |
Figure 1.Comparative assessment of the 7-day moving positivity rate and the mortality rate for 56 weeks with Covid-19 in Malta.
Source: https://deputyprimeminister.gov.mt/en/health-promotion/covid-19/Pages/covid-19-infographics.asp
Figure 2.Comparative assessment of 7-day moving average and hospital admissions during the second Covid-19 wave in Malta.
Source: https://deputyprimeminister.gov.mt/en/health-promotion/covid-19/Pages/covid-19-infographics.asp
Figure 3.Instituted restrictions in accordance with the 7-day moving average of the positivity rate during the second Covid-19 wave in Malta.
Source: https://deputyprimeminister.gov.mt/en/health-promotion/covid-19/Pages/covid-19-infographics.asp
Figure 4.Average mortality rate and cumulative Covid-19 vaccination doses across weeks.
Source: https://deputyprimeminister.gov.mt/en/health-promotion/covid-19/Pages/covid-19-infographics.asp