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The purpose of the study is to describe disability following hospitalization in people of working-age surviving COVID-19.
Full description
In December 2019, the Wuhan Municipal Health Committee in China identified an outbreak with viral pneumonia cases of unknown cause. Coronavirus RNA was identified as the causal agent. The disease caused by SARS-CoV-2 has been named COVID-19. While most people with COVID-19 develop uncomplicated illness, approximately 14% develop severe forms of the disease and 5% are critically ill, potentially leaving survivors with non-fatal sequelae. To date, the long-term burden of COVID-19 and patients' perspectives and needs have been left unaddressed. As compared to 2003 SARS outbreak, one can anticipate persisting disability in COVID-19 survivors, including specific post-COVID and non-specific post-intensive care syndromes. The investigators hypothesize that dramatic COVID-19-specific and non-specific mid- and long-term disabilities would persist in people surviving COVID-19.
The main objective will be to provide a deep understanding of non-fatal health outcomes in people surviving COVID-19, by comprehensively and systematically mapping and monitoring, within the WHO ICF framework, disability levels and profiles, in the mid and long terms in people surviving COVID-19.
Disability levels will be assessed at 12 (±7) and 36 (±3) months using:
A. The secondary objectives will be to describe COVID-19 specific and non-specific impairments, activity limitations and participation restriction at 12 (±7) and 36 (±3) months in people surviving COVID-19:
B. Another secondary objective will be to assess the burden of the patient's SARS-CoV-2 infection on the patient's close relative, between M12-inclusion and M36 patient visits.
• The burden on patient's close relative will be assessed using specific printed self-administered questionnaires.
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Central trial contact
Laetitia PEAUDECERF, PhD; Christelle NGUYEN, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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