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Hospital reports some COVID-19 patients with symptoms recovered in a week

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Cedars-Sinai reported this week that a majority of patients who visited the hospital’s Emergency Department in spring with suspected COVID-19 symptoms, and who were treated and sent home to recuperate, recovered within a week.

None of the patients seen fit to go home died from the virus and fewer than 1 percent required intensive care, according to the hospital, which published its findings in the Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open.

“When the pandemic began, there was minimal evidence to guide us as to who should be hospitalized and who could be sent home,” said Dr. Sam Torbati, co-chair and medical director of the Ruth and Harry Roman Emergency Department. “In real time, we began developing our criteria for who needed hospitalization for monitoring, intensive care and who could recover at home. And this study shows our patients received the appropriate level of care.”

In the retrospective study, researchers said they looked at the outcomes of 452 patients who sought care at the emergency department for COVID-19 symptoms between March 12 and April 6.

“The takeaway for the public is that emergency clinicians can safely and readily identify patients with COVID-19 who are safe for outpatient monitoring,” Torbati said. “Those who meet criteria for discharge are at very low risk of getting worse and requiring hospitalization.”

The study showed that the patients, with a median age of 38, had experienced flu-like symptoms two to three days before they went to the emergency department. After being given a comprehensive care plan and then discharged home, it took an average of between five and seven days for patients to recover at home, Cedars-Sinai reported.

“What we learned from the study is that outpatient management is safe for most COVID-19 patients who have normal vital signs and no comorbidities,” said Dr. Carl Berdahl, the first author of the study.

“However, patients should be instructed to return to the Emergency Department for worsening symptoms, including labored breathing.”

According to the study, 61 percent of the patients in the sample had no co- morbidities, or underlying symptoms, and 13 percent of patients who were sent home came back to the emergency department for additional care.

The inpatient admission rate at 30 days was 4 percent, with fewer than 1 percent of patients requiring intensive care.

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