Selected article for: "clinical course and medical staff"

Author: Jie Liu; Liu Ouyang; Pi Guo; Hai sheng Wu; Peng Fu; Yu liang Chen; Dan Yang; Xiao yu Han; Yu kun Cao; Osamah Alwalid; Juan Tao; Shu yi Peng; He shui Shi; Fan Yang; Chuan sheng Zheng
Title: Epidemiological, Clinical Characteristics and Outcome of Medical Staff Infected with COVID-19 in Wuhan, China: A Retrospective Case Series Analysis
  • Document date: 2020_3_13
  • ID: hnm54k4r_48
    Snippet: Medical staff with symptoms onset for less than 10 days by the time of admission were compared with those with symptoms of more than 10 days. We found that medical staff with symptoms for less than 10 days had more prominent laboratory abnormalities on admission, and they also experienced relatively worse clinical course and longer hospital stay. Furthermore, the median time between symptoms onset and admission of infected medical staff in this s.....
    Document: Medical staff with symptoms onset for less than 10 days by the time of admission were compared with those with symptoms of more than 10 days. We found that medical staff with symptoms for less than 10 days had more prominent laboratory abnormalities on admission, and they also experienced relatively worse clinical course and longer hospital stay. Furthermore, the median time between symptoms onset and admission of infected medical staff in this study was 8.5 days, longer than general population as described in recent publications [10, 21] . We believe that mild cases of infected medical staff without an early hospitalization was mainly because they made admirable concessions to provide the limited-number of isolation wards for infected patients with worse conditions during the peak time of COVID-19 epidemic in Wuhan.

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