Covid-19: Half of patients given ventilation died – German study

Covid-19: Half of patients given ventilation died – German study

BERLIN, July 30 (NNN-AGENCIES) — One in five patients hospitalised
in Germany over the coronavirus succumbed to the disease, with the
fatality rate rising to 53 percent for those who received ventilation,
a study showed Wednesday.

Data of 10,000 patients admitted to 930 German hospitals between
February 26 and April 19 were analysed by the German Interdisciplinary
Association of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine, the Technical
University of Berlin and AOK health insurance group’s research arm
WIdO.

Hospitalised male patients had a higher mortality rate than women,
with 25 percent compared to 19 percent.

Older patients were also significantly more vulnerable, as 27
percent of patients in their 70s died while 38 percent of those above
80 years old failed to pull through.

“These high mortality rates clearly show that a relatively high
number of patients with a very serious course of disease were treated
in hospitals,” said Juergen Klauber, director of WIdO.

“Such serious course of diseases mainly affects older people and
people whose health is already compromised, but also occur in younger
patients,” he warned, urging the population to take necessary
precautions to prevent new infections.

Of the 10,021 patients, 1,727 were given mechanical ventilation.
While almost twice as many who received ventilation were men, the
mortality rates were similar gender-wise, the study said.

Patients were staying in hospitals for an average of 14 days, with
those not on ventilation hospitalised for an average of 12 days while
the duration for those who needed help breathing rose to 25 days.

Reinhard Busse, professor of healthcare management at TU Berlin,
noted that on average, 240 days of ventilation would be required for
every 100 hospitalised patients.

“These are important numbers to prepare for a second wave of the
pandemic. However, we do not anticipate any problems with normal
hospital beds, even with high infection rates,” he added.

Thanks to its decentralised healthcare system, Germany has been able
to significantly ramp up its capacity to treat COVID-19 patients,
avoiding scenes like in Italy where some hospitals were overwhelmed by
the sudden huge caseload.

However, health experts have urged against complacency, with the
head of the RKI disease control agency, Lothar Wieler, repeatedly
urging the population to keep to hygiene rules like social distancing
or mask wearing.

With the summer holiday season in full swing, politicians are also
watching anxiously at infection numbers which have ticked up in recent
weeks.

As of Wednesday, Germany has recorded 206,926 cases of infections
including 9,128 deaths. — NNN-AGENCIES

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