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    SARS-CoV-2 infection hospitalization, severity, criticality, and fatality rates in Qatar

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    SARS-CoV-2 infection hospitalization, severity, criticality, and fatality rates in Qatar.pdf (2.226Mb)
    Date
    2021-12-01
    Author
    Seedat, Shaheen
    Chemaitelly, Hiam
    Ayoub, Houssein H.
    Makhoul, Monia
    Mumtaz, Ghina R.
    Al Kanaani, Zaina
    Al Khal, Abdullatif
    Al Kuwari, Einas
    Butt, Adeel A.
    Coyle, Peter
    Jeremijenko, Andrew
    Kaleeckal, Anvar Hassan
    Latif, Ali Nizar
    Shaik, Riyazuddin Mohammad
    Yassine, Hadi M.
    Al Kuwari, Mohamed G.
    Al Romaihi, Hamad Eid
    Al-Thani, Mohamed H.
    Bertollini, Roberto
    Abu-Raddad, Laith J.
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic resulted in considerable morbidity and mortality as well as severe economic and societal disruptions. Despite scientific progress, true infection severity, factoring both diagnosed and undiagnosed infections, remains poorly understood. This study aimed to estimate SARS-CoV-2 age-stratified and overall morbidity and mortality rates based on analysis of extensive epidemiological data for the pervasive epidemic in Qatar, a country where < 9% of the population are ≥ 50 years. We show that SARS-CoV-2 severity and fatality demonstrate a striking age dependence with low values for those aged < 50 years, but rapidly growing rates for those ≥ 50 years. Age dependence was particularly pronounced for infection criticality rate and infection fatality rate. With Qatar’s young population, overall SARS-CoV-2 severity and fatality were not high with < 4 infections in every 1000 being severe or critical and < 2 in every 10,000 being fatal. Only 13 infections in every 1000 received any hospitalization in acute-care-unit beds and < 2 in every 1000 were hospitalized in intensive-care-unit beds. However, we show that these rates would have been much higher if Qatar’s population had the demographic structure of Europe or the United States. Epidemic expansion in nations with young populations may lead to considerably lower disease burden than currently believed.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85115322553&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-97606-8
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/33925
    Collections
    • COVID-19 Research [‎848‎ items ]
    • Mathematics, Statistics & Physics [‎786‎ items ]

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