A National Survey of Children, Adults, and the Elderly in the Fourth Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic to Compare Acute and Post-COVID-19 Conditions in Saudi Arabia

Author:

Alsagheir Aeshah1ORCID,Amer Samer23ORCID,Alzubaidi Lamya4,Alenezi Fasial5,Alamaa Tareef6,Asiri Abdullah7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Family and Home Health Care Consultant, Assistant Agency for Hospitals Services, Therapeutic Deputyship, Ministry of Health (MOH), Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

2. Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Zagazig University, Zagazig 44519, Egypt

3. Assistant Agency of Public Health, Ministry of Health (MOH), Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

4. Consultant Diabetologist, Director of Technical Affairs and Ada’a in the Deputy for Hospitals Services, Therapeutic Deputyship, Ministry of Health (MOH), Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

5. Deputy Minister Assistant for Hospitals Services, Therapeutic Deputyship, Ministry of Health (MOH), Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

6. Deputy Minister for Therapeutic Services, Therapeutic Deputyship, Ministry of Health (MOH), Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

7. Deputy Minister Assistant for Preventive Services, Consultant of Adult Infectious Diseases, Ministry of Health (MOH), Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

Background: The fight against COVID-19 appears to extend beyond screening and treatment of acute diseases to its medium- and long-term health consequences. Little is known about the epidemiology and the determinants of developing post-COVID-19 conditions (PCCs) among children. The aims of this study were to explore and determine the prevalence of PCCs among three age groups (children and adolescents, adults, and the elderly), and study the predictors of participants’ return to their pre-COVID-19 health status among COVID-19 patients at least four weeks after they got sick, from February to 15 July 2022. Methods: This comparison survey study targeted 12,121 COVID-19 patients who fulfilled the selection criteria from the national register system and received a virtual assessment from the Medical Consultation Call Center (937), which was conducted by a well-trained family physician using a validated, well-structured assessment tool. The collected data were coded and analyzed using appropriate tests. Results: Out of the 12,121 recovered COVID-19 patients who received the virtual assessment calls, only 5909 (48.8%) agreed and completed the assessment. The majority of participants (4973, or 84.2%) reported no PCCs. The most common PCCs among young people were a cough, dyspnea, fatigue, and loss of appetite or weight loss, while among the elderly they were a cough, dyspnea, fatigue, stomachaches, poor concentration, sleep disturbance, and recurrent fever. Most post-COVID-19 cases require nothing more than reassurance and health education as only 384 (6.5%) required referral to primary health care centers (PHCCs.) The severity of COVID-19 infection, age group, sex, vaccination status, and body mass index were significant predictors for returning to the pre-infection health status and the required referral was significantly related to many factors. Conclusions: The comparison of children, adults, and the elderly with regard to the acute and post-COVID-19 conditions in Saudi Arabia in terms of the clinical health assessment and the required management plans showed significant differences.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference51 articles.

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