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1.
Public Health ; 198: 297-300, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1347796

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Concerns about the increasing impact of severe COVID-19 in younger individuals in Brazil came after a recent synchronised country-wide wave of cases in Brazil. This communication analyses how hospitalisations due to COVID-19 changed in the age groups 18-49 years and ≥70 years. STUDY DESIGN: Longitudinal study based on secondary data. METHODS: Data from SIVEP-Gripe, a public and open-access database of Severe Acute Respiratory Illness records (including COVID-19 notifications), were used in this study. Statistical control charts examined changes in the magnitude and variation of younger (18-49 years) and older (≥70 years) adults who were hospitalised between 15th March 2020 and 19th June 2021. RESULTS: During the few first weeks of the pandemic in Brazil, the number of COVID-19 hospitalisations increased in older adults but decreased in younger adults. Subsequently, hospitalisations reached statistical control zones in epidemiological weeks (EW) 19-48 of 2020 (EW 19-48/2020) and EW 03-05/2021 (18-49 y, mean = 26.1%; ≥70 y, mean = 32.8%). Between EW 49/2020 and EW 02/2021, the number of hospitalisations of younger adults dropped to levels below the lower control limit. In contrast, the number of hospitalisations of older adults surpassed the upper limit of the corresponding statistical control zones. However, from EW 06/2021, numbers of hospitalisations changed from statistical control zones, with hospitalisations of younger adults increasing and reaching 44.9% in EW 24/2021 and hospitalisations of older adults decreasing until EW 19/2021 (14.1%) and reaching 17.3% in EW 24/2021. CONCLUSIONS: An increasing number of COVID-19 hospitalisations were observed in younger adults from EW 06/2021. This could be a result of the successful vaccination programme in older adults, who were initially prioritised, and possibly an increased exposure to highly transmissible variants of COVID-19 in younger adults who had to go to work in the absence of social protection (i.e. government financial support). Potential consequences of COVID-19 hospitalisations in younger adults could include a reduced life expectancy of the population and an increased number of people unable to perform daily activities due to post-COVID-19 conditions.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brazil/epidemiology , Hospitalization , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Middle Aged , SARS-CoV-2 , Young Adult
2.
Prion,, Viral,, Bacterial, and, Fungal, Pathogens, of, Humans, [VV210]|Non-communicable, Human, Diseases, and, Injuries, [VV600]|Host, Resistance, and, Immunity, [HH600]|Health, Services, [UU350]|age, groups|asthma|cardiovascular, diseases|chronic, diseases|comorbidity|coronavirus, disease, 2019|diabetes|disease, prevention|elderly|epidemics|epidemiology|health, programmes|health, protection|hospital, admission|human, diseases|immunization|immunization, programmes|kidney, diseases|mortality|old, age|pandemics|public, health|respiratory, diseases|risk, assessment|risk, groups|risk, reduction|severe, course|sex|vaccination|vaccines|viral, diseases|immune, sensitization|acute, course|man|Severe, acute, respiratory, syndrome, coronavirus, 2|Brazil|Community, of, Portuguese, Language, Countries|high, Human, Development, Index, countries|Latin, America|America|South, America|upper-middle, income, countries|Homo|Hominidae|primates|mammals|vertebrates|Chordata|animals|eukaryotes|Severe, acute, respiratory, syndrome-related, coronavirus|Betacoronavirus|Coronavirinae|Coronaviridae|Nidovirales|positive-sense, ssRNA, Viruses|ssRNA, Viruses|RNA, Viruses|viruses|aged|elderly, people|older, adults|senior, citizens|health, programs|immunization, programs|kidney, disorders|nephropathy|renal, diseases|death, rate|lung, diseases|SARS-CoV-2|viral, infections ; 2021(Cadernos de Saude Publica)
Article in Portuguese | WHO COVID | ID: covidwho-1558983

ABSTRACT

In a context of community transmission and shortage of vaccines, COVID-19 vaccination should focus on directly reducing the morbidity and mortality caused by the disease. It is thus essential to define priority groups for vaccination by the National Immunization Program (PNI in Portuguese), based on the risk of hospitalization and death from the disease. We thus calculated overrisk according to sex, age group, and comorbidities using hospitalization and death records from severe acute respiratory illness with confirmation of COVID-19 (SARI-COVID) in all of Brazil in the first six months of the epidemic. Higher overrisk was associated with male sex (hospitalization=1.1 and death=1.2), age over 45 years for hospitalization (OvRag ranging from 1.1 to 8.5), and age over 55 year for death (OvRag ranging from 1.5 to 18.3). In the groups of comorbidities, chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, and chronic lung disease were associated with overrisk, while there was no such evidence for asthma. Chronic kidney disease or diabetes plus age over 60 showed an even stronger association, reaching overrisk of death 14 and 10 times greater than in the general population, respectively. For all the comorbidities, there was higher overrisk at older ages, with a downward gradient in the oldest age groups. This pattern was reversed when examining overrisk in the general population, for both hospitalization and death. The current study provided evidence of overrisk of hospitalization and death from SARI-COVID, assisting the definition of priority groups for COVID-19 vaccination.

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