Open Access
COVID Impact on Functional Status of Hospitalized Patients
Author(s) -
Anam Jamil,
Kainat Gul,
Rania Imran,
Rimsha Shahid,
Muhammad Mustafa,
Madiha Shakeel,
Jaweria Syed
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
infektološki glasnik
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1848-7769
pISSN - 1331-2820
DOI - 10.37797/ig.41.3.3
Subject(s) - medicine , covid-19 , pandemic , intensive care unit , isolation (microbiology) , emergency medicine , disease , outbreak , intensive care medicine , infectious disease (medical specialty) , virology , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
Originating with unexplained symptoms from Wuhan, city of China, COVID-19 being a global pandemic causing tremendous morbidity and mortality, has proved to be the biggest challenge of the 20th century. This study aimed to explore the functional impacts of COVID-19 upon those patients who were diagnosed with this disease and were admitted in hospitals. This cross-sectional survey included 183 COVID-19 diagnosed patients from COVID-19 isolation wards of public and private hospitals of Islamabad and Rawalpindi. After getting ethical permission from Institutional Review Board of Shifa International Hospital (Ref # 070-21), this survey was conducted for the time period of 6 months from December 2020 to May 2021. Through convenient sampling, 183 patients with the age range of 25 to 55 years with no already diagnosed psychological complaints were assessed for eligibility briefed regarding the study purpose and then were asked for their voluntary participation. The Functional Status Scale for the Intensive Care Unit (FSS-ICU) was used to assess the functional status impacted due to COVID-19 during hospitalization. Frequencies and percentages were calculated through SPSS-21. On FSS-ICU, out of 183 COVID-19, 11 (6%) patients reported that they were dependent, 18 (9.8%) required maximum assistance, 32 (17.5%) required moderate assistance, 27 (14.8%) required minimal, 24 (13.1%) required supervision to complete their tasks, 28 (15.3%) required assistive devices, whereas 43 (23.5%) were totally independent. Results indicated a temporal impact of COVID-19 upon functional status of hospitalized patients in intensive care units, therefore highlighting the need of physiotherapeutic and psychotherapeutic interventions.