Selected article for: "female female and male male female female"

Author: Ting Ding; Jinjin Zhang; Tian Wang; Pengfei Cui; Zhe Chen; Jingjing Jiang; Su Zhou; Jun Dai; Bo Wang; Suzhen Yuan; Wenqing Ma; Lingwei Ma; Yueguang Rong; Jiang Chang; Xiaoping Miao; Xiangyi Ma; Shixuan Wang
Title: A Multi-hospital Study in Wuhan, China:Protective Effects of Non-menopause and Female Hormones on SARS-CoV-2 infection
  • Document date: 2020_3_30
  • ID: lplodn60_22
    Snippet: There were more female patients in mild group (male 412, 44.06%; female 444, 45.92%), approximately the same proportion of female and male patients in severe group (male 486, 51.98%; female 503, 52.02%), and less female patients in critical group (male 37, 3.96%; female 20, 2.07%, p= 0.05). By the end of Mar 8, more female patients (97 ,10.03%) than male patients (85, 9.09%)) had been discharged, and less female patients (16, 1.65%) than male pat.....
    Document: There were more female patients in mild group (male 412, 44.06%; female 444, 45.92%), approximately the same proportion of female and male patients in severe group (male 486, 51.98%; female 503, 52.02%), and less female patients in critical group (male 37, 3.96%; female 20, 2.07%, p= 0.05). By the end of Mar 8, more female patients (97 ,10.03%) than male patients (85, 9.09%)) had been discharged, and less female patients (16, 1.65%) than male patients (45, 4.81%) had died (p< 0.01). There was a significant difference between male and female patients in the severity and clinical outcomes, while not in the age distribution (eTable 1, eFigure 1).

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