Men have a 30 percent higher risk of dying from Covid-19 compared to women of the same age and health status, according to a new study that examined the link between patients’ common features and the risk of dying from the disease new coronavirus. Covid-19 hospitals have a higher risk of dying if they are male or obese or have problems with diabetes or hip-suffering, the study, published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, note.
In the research, the scientists from the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) in the US evaluated nearly 67,000 Covid-19 patients in the hospital in 613 hospitals across the country. They reported that patients who were obese, had diabetes or had poorly controlled diabetes compared to those who did not have these conditions. The study noted that Covid-19 patients ages 20 to 39 with these conditions had the greatest difference in their risk of dying compared to their healthier peers.
“It is a powerful experience in many ways, so I think understanding which Covid-19 patients in the hospital are most prone to death can help guide difficult treatment decisions, ”Study author Anthony D. Harris said.
The researchers believe that healthcare providers could consider these risks when determining which Covid-19 patients would benefit most from antibody treatments that, if possible. they are given in the first few days of the disease, reducing the risk of hospitalization.
According to the study, age remained the strongest predictor of death from Covid-19. He noted that, overall, nearly 19 percent of Covid-19 patients in the hospital died from their disease with the lowest mortality among parent-child patients, which was less than two percent .
Mortality rates increased with each decade of life with the highest mortality, 34 percent, among those aged 80 and older.
“There is still the highest risk of dying in elderly patients, but younger patients with obesity or hip hypertension have the highest risk of dying compared to other patients their age. without these conditions, ”said study lead author Katherine E. Goodman.