AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study assessed the public health impact of COVID-19 on French patients with risk factors, using a Markov model to estimate various outcomes like hospitalizations, deaths, and costs over two years.
  • - Results indicated a significant burden with 256 hospitalizations per 1,000 patients in the first month and 382 over two years, along with 37 deaths and 407 cases of long COVID.
  • - The findings highlight an urgent need for effective strategies to reduce COVID-19 burden, especially among older and unvaccinated patients, with notable cost implications for healthcare.

Article Abstract

Background: Quantification of COVID-19 burden may be useful to support the future allocation of resources.

Objective: To evaluate the public health impact of COVID-19 in French ambulatory patients with at least one risk factor for severe disease.

Study Design: A Markov model was used to estimate life years, costs, number of hospitalisations, number of deaths and long/prolonged COVID forms over a time horizon of 2 years. The hospitalisation probabilities were derived from an early access cohort, and the hospitalisation stay characteristics were derived from the French national hospital discharge database. Several scenario analyses were conducted.

Results: The number of hospitalisations reached 256 per 1,000 patients over the acute phase (first month of simulation), and 382 per 1,000 patients over 2 years. The number of deaths was 37 per 1,000 patients, and the number of long/prolonged COVID forms reached 407 per 1,000 patients. These translated into a reduction of 0.7 days of life per patient in the first month, with an associated cost of €1,578, and a reduction of 27 days of life over the time horizon, with an associated cost of €4,280. The highest burden was observed for patients over 80 years old, and those not vaccinated. The scenarios with a less severe situation or new treatments available showed a non-negligible burden reduction.

Conclusion: This study allowed us to quantify the considerable burden related to COVID-19 in infected patients, with at least one risk factor for severe form. Strategies with the ability to substantially reduce this burden in France are urgently required.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9196736PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20016689.2022.2082646DOI Listing

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