학술논문
Prevalence of swallow, communication, voice and cognitive compromise following hospitalisation for COVID-19: the PHOSP-COVID analysis
Document Type
article
Author
Linzy Houchen-Wolloff; Sally Singh; Jennifer K Quint; Michael Marks; Nicholas Hart; Matthew Richardson; Ling-Pei Ho; Charlotte E Bolton; Rachael A Evans; Amit Kulkarni; Amisha Singapuri; Felicity Evison; Sarah Wallace; Betty Raman; Trudie Chalder; Claire Marie Nolan; William Man; Ewen Harrison; Nazir I Lone; Chris Brightling; Julie Whitney; James Chalmers; Enya Daynes; Neil J Greening; Annemarie Docherty; Gavin Donaldson; Janet Scott; Camilla Dawson; Tom Yates; Louise V Wain; Marco Sereno; Krisnah Poinasamy; Gemma Clunie; Hamish McAuley; Alex Robert Horsley; Melitta McNarry; Sallyanne Duncan; Olivia C Leavy; Elneima Omer; Aarti Shikotra; Ruth M Saunders; Victoria C Harris; Dan Gower Wootton; Jack Sargent; John Pimm; Lettie Bishop; Neil Sharma; Margaret Coffey
Source
BMJ Open Respiratory Research, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2023)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2052-4439
Abstract
Objective Identify prevalence of self-reported swallow, communication, voice and cognitive compromise following hospitalisation for COVID-19.Design Multicentre prospective observational cohort study using questionnaire data at visit 1 (2–7 months post discharge) and visit 2 (10–14 months post discharge) from hospitalised patients in the UK. Lasso logistic regression analysis was undertaken to identify associations.Setting 64 UK acute hospital Trusts.Participants Adults aged >18 years, discharged from an admissions unit or ward at a UK hospital with COVID-19.Main outcome measures Self-reported swallow, communication, voice and cognitive compromise.Results Compromised swallowing post intensive care unit (post-ICU) admission was reported in 20% (188/955); 60% with swallow problems received invasive mechanical ventilation and were more likely to have undergone proning (p=0.039). Voice problems were reported in 34% (319/946) post-ICU admission who were more likely to have received invasive (p