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Clinical and spatial characteristics of severe acute respiratory syndrome by COVID-19 in indigenous of Brazil

Sardinha, Daniele Melo; Lima, Karla Valéria Batista; Ferreira, Ana Lúcia da Silva; Garcez, Juliana Conceição Dias; Ueno, Thalyta Mariany Rêgo Lopes; Rodrigues, Yan Corrêa; Santos, Anderson Lineu Siqueira dos; Loiola, Rosane do Socorro Pompeu de; Guimarães, Ricardo José de Paula Souza e; Lima, Luana Nepomuceno Gondim Costa.
SARDINHA, Daniele Melo et al. Clinical and spatial characteristics of severe acute respiratory syndrome by COVID-19 in indigenous of Brazil. Advances in Infectious Diseases, v. 11, n. 4, p. 441-454, Dec. 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | IED | ID: ied-4563
The new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) broke out in Wuhan in China in December 2019, causing severe pneumonia and deaths, soon in March 2020, it reached pandemic level, affecting several countries including Brazil. The disease was named COVID-19, with characteristics of most infected having mild and moderate symptoms and a part severe symptom. The disease has already reached 158 ethnic groups, which have high vulnerability and limited access to health services. The objective is to investigate the clinical and spatial characteristics of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome of COVID-19 in the indigenous peoples of Brazil. It is an epidemiological, cross-sectional, analytical ecological study, based on data from the OpenDataSUS platform from 01/01/2020 to 31/08/2020. Profile variables, signs and symptoms and risk factors/comorbidities. The data were analyzed by Bioestat 5.3. There were 1,207 cases and 470 deaths. Profile male gender (59.48%) means age 53 years. Signs and symptoms fever (74.23%), cough (77.71%), sore throat (35.62%), dyspnea (69.34%), respiratory discomfort (62.80%), O2 saturation < 95% (56.42%); and associated with mortality dyspnea (80.0%) and O2 saturation < 95% (69.36%). Risk factors and comorbidities (45.89%) were associated with deaths (54.04%). About comorbidities, chronic cardiovascular diseases represented (18.97%) and Diabetes Mellitus (18.97%), and associated with deaths Chronic Cardiovascular Disease (24.46%). Being admitted to the ICU has a risk of death in (OR-3.96- < 0.0001-CI-2913/5383) followed by not being vaccinated against influenza (OR-1.85- < 0.0001-CI-1358/2528). The public and health policies of Brazil should be directed to control the dissemination of COVID-19 in this population, that COVID-19 evolves in the same intensity, however, the indigenous have vulnerabilities that can increase the impact of the pandemic in this population. / Evandro Chagas Institute (IEC) / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPQ)/Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior é uma fundação vinculada ao Ministério da Educação do Brasil (CAPES).