Background: COVID-19 symptom reports describe varying levels of disease severity with differing periods of recovery and symptom trajectories. Thus, there are a multitude of disease and symptom characteristics clinicians must navigate and interpret to guide care.
Objective: To find natural groups of patients with similar constellations of post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) symptoms.
The epidemiology and organ-specific sequelae following acute illness due to COVID-19 and prompting patients to seek COVID recovery care are not yet well characterized. This cross-sectional study reviewed data on 200 adult patients with prolonged symptoms of COVID-19 (>14 days after symptom onset) not resolved by usual primary care or specialist care who were referred for COVID-specific follow-up. Most patients sought COVID recovery clinic visits within the first 2 months of initial onset of symptoms (median 37 days), with some seeking care for sequelae persisting up to 10 months (median 82 days).
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October 2019
Hypertension management guidelines are influenced by clinical trials that utilize automated office blood pressure (BP) to measure BP. Many primary care clinics still use manual office BP, which has been shown to produce significantly higher BP values than automated office BP. In a primary care office, a manual BP was obtained by nursing staff using an aneroid sphygmomanometer.
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