The Symptom Experience and Functioning of Non-Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients Within the First 20 days

Author:

Tütün Yümin Eylem1,Sürmeli Mahmut2ORCID,Topcuoğlu Ceyhun3,Başol Göksülük Merve4,Yümin Murat5

Affiliation:

1. Bolu Abant İzzet Baysal University, Turkey

2. Tokat Gaziosmanpaşa University, Turkey

3. Munzur University, Tunceli, Turkey

4. Erciyes University, Kayseri, Turkey

5. Beskavaklar Family Health Center, Bolu, Turkey

Abstract

The adverse physical, psychological, and mental health consequences associated with COVID-19 illness are well-documented. However, how specific symptoms change over time and how COVID-19 affects one’s day-to-day activities of daily living (ADL), Quality of Life (QoL), sleep quality, and fatigue severity are not well described. This longitudinal and descriptive study examined the changes in COVID-19 symptoms, ADL, QoL, sleep quality, and fatigue severity within the first 20 days. A convenience sample ( n = 41) of non-hospitalized SARS-CoV-2 positive patients were recruited and followed for 20 days. Participants completed self-report measures: COVID-19 symptoms, ADL, QoL, sleep quality, and fatigue severity at days: 1, 10, and 20 following a diagnosis. Findings revealed that symptoms decreased over 20 days ( p < .001). In parallel with the decrease in symptoms, QoL and ADL improved over 20 days ( p < .05). However, sleep quality and fatigue severity did not improve within 20 days ( p > .05). Our findings contribute to the growing evidence that COVID-19 symptoms can linger, especially fatigue and sleep quality, that affect overall day-to-day functioning for at least 20 days after diagnosis. To mitigate the effect of COVID-19 on QOL and ADL, findings underscore the need for clinicians to work collaboratively with patients to develop a symptom management plan for a variety of symptoms including fatigue and sleep quality. Beginning to repurpose existing self-management strategies for the longer term COVID-19 symptoms could be beneficial and help to optimize patient outcomes. Future work should examine these variables over a longer timeframe and among different samples of non-hospitalized patients.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Nursing

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