ISSN: 2161-0711

Gemeinschaftsmedizin und Gesundheitserziehung

Offener Zugang

Unsere Gruppe organisiert über 3000 globale Konferenzreihen Jährliche Veranstaltungen in den USA, Europa und anderen Ländern. Asien mit Unterstützung von 1000 weiteren wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaften und veröffentlicht über 700 Open Access Zeitschriften, die über 50.000 bedeutende Persönlichkeiten und renommierte Wissenschaftler als Redaktionsmitglieder enthalten.

Open-Access-Zeitschriften gewinnen mehr Leser und Zitierungen
700 Zeitschriften und 15.000.000 Leser Jede Zeitschrift erhält mehr als 25.000 Leser

Abstrakt

To Assess the Clinical Pattern of COVID-19 among the Vaccinated People

Sai Priya Nimmagadda, Nethra Somannagari, Shubham G, Saumya LG, Venu Bolisetti, Srikanth Gadam

Background: Since the World Health Organisation has declared COVID-19 a pandemic on 11 March 2020, it has become a significant health concern at an alarming rate. There have been tremendous efforts by the countries to provide adequate care to the people affected by SARS-CoV-2. India is running one of the worldʼs largest vaccination programmes.COVID-19 vaccines are designed to prompt an immune response that, recognises and blocks the virus .However people with comorbidities who have a weakened immune response may still be at risk even after vaccination.

Aim: The aim of our study is to assess clinical pattern of disease among vaccinated COVID-19 patients and to find the correlation between comorbdities and the severity of disease outcome in post vaccinated COVID-19 patients.

Materials and method: A descriptive cross sectional study was done taking COVID-19 patients from GANDHI Hospital, Secunderabad admitted during the months of May to August 2021.Gandhi Hospital is a territory care facility which has been the heart of pandemic management. On a random basis 1000 COVID-19 patients were taken, out of which 99 were vaccinated either with single or both doses. The data was collected via telecommunication using a semi structural standardised pro forma and the responses were noted. The data was entered in a MS Excel sheet and analysed using IBM SPSS statistics.

Results: In our study the association between comorbidity and outcome was found to be statistically significant (p=0.028).Out of the 61 patients with comorbidities 35(57.4%) fully recovered, 16(26.2%) partially recovered and 10(16.4%) died. We have found that post vaccinated COVID-19 patients with comorbidities have longer hospital stay probability (61.6%) and oxygen requirement (65.6%).

Conclusion: Our study showed that among the breakthrough infections, the risk of mortality is approximately 8 times more in patients with comorbidities. This shows that COVID-19 is still possible even after vaccination are hitting people with one or more comorbidities particularly hard.