• Aucun résultat trouvé

Cross sectional study of the clinical characteristics of French primary care patients with COVID-19

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Cross sectional study of the clinical characteristics of French primary care patients with COVID-19"

Copied!
2
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

Cross sectional study of the clinical characteristics of French primary care patients with COVID-19

Paul Sebo, Benoit Tudrej, Julie Lourdaux, Clara Cuzin, Martin Floquet, Dagmar M.

Haller, Hubert Maisonneuve

Appendix #1. Sociodemographic characteristics and medical conditions, stratified by study population (healthcare professionals vs. other patients)

Characteristics Healthcare

professionals (n=434), N (%)

Other patients (n=791), N (%)

p- value1

Female gender (n=1225) 346 (79.7) 437 (55.3) <0.001

Age group (years) (n=1225) <0.001

< 40 240 (55.3) 239 (30.2)

40-59 162 (37.3) 262 (33.1)

≥ 60 32 (7.4) 290 (36.7)

Medical conditions (n=1225)

Asthma 7 (1.6) 147 (18.6) <0.001

Hypertension 8 (1.8) 124 (15.7) <0.001

Immunosuppression 2 (0.5) 71 (9.0) 0.002

Diabetes 1 (0.2) 57 (7.2) <0.001

Lung disease2 1 (0.2) 44 (5.6) <0.001

Pregnancy 1 (0.2) 37 (4.7) <0.001

Stroke or ischemic heart disease3 0 29 (3.7) <0.001

Heart failure 1 (0.2) 26 (3.3) 0.01

Obesity2 0 26 (3.3) <0.001

Cancer 0 16 (2.0) <0.001

1 univariate logistic regression (adjusted for clustering within labs)

2 number of available data: 1224

3 number of available data: 1223

Références

Documents relatifs

Motivated from the proposals of the existing work done by the re- searchers on COVID-19, we presented a literature review on early detection of the symptoms of COVID virus and

Thus, the speech of a group of patients with neurotic and stress-related disorders, in comparison with other groups, reveals the signs of emotional tension, depression, anxiety,

Moreover, this study also suggests that the sample of teachers in this study perceived a greater impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their QoL as a whole compared to those in

Compared to patients who tested negative, those who tested positive were significantly more likely to complain of dry nose, loss of taste, loss of smell, fever and muscle pain.. On

Proportion of symptoms reported by participants with negative and positive SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR test, stratified by study population (healthcare

Paul Sebo, Benoit Tudrej, Julie Lourdaux, Clara Cuzin, Martin Floquet, Dagmar M. Haller,

GPs com- pleted a written form for each patient enrolled, collect- ing the following variables to understand their healthcare services use in the 12 months preceding the

The variables reported in tables and figures were collected online. The questionnaire was built in a timely manner to allow us to capture data at the time of the surge. The study