Author: Omar Badawi; Xinggang Liu; Iris Berman; Pamela J Amelung; Martin Doerfler; Saurabh Chandra
Title: Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on severity of illness and resources required during intensive care in the greater New York City area Document date: 2020_4_14
ID: 54auaa78_21
Snippet: is the (which was not peer-reviewed) The copyright holder for this preprint . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.08.20058180 doi: medRxiv preprint There are several limitations worth considering. Due to expansion of available beds for treating patients during this pandemic, these data do not reflect the entire population of ICU patients, but instead reflect patients monitored using tele-critical care. It is clear ICU patients during the pandemic are.....
Document: is the (which was not peer-reviewed) The copyright holder for this preprint . https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.08.20058180 doi: medRxiv preprint There are several limitations worth considering. Due to expansion of available beds for treating patients during this pandemic, these data do not reflect the entire population of ICU patients, but instead reflect patients monitored using tele-critical care. It is clear ICU patients during the pandemic are dramatically sicker than those in the prior year, possibly reflecting preferential triage to monitored units. As a supplementary model of care, it's possible the reliability of certain data elements are suboptimal, especially amid the pandemic response though we observe low rates of missing data.
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