Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

COVID-19 less deadly as medical treatments advance.

- OLIVIA RAIMONDE

Covid-19 continues to kill close to 1,000 Americans a day, but for those who develop dangerous cases of the infection, advances in medical care and the growing experience of doctors are improving the chances of survival.

Since the first case arrived in the U.S. at the start of the year, medical profession­als have gone from fumbling in the dark to better understand­ing which drugs work — such as steroids and blood thinners, and the antiviral medicine, remdesivir. Allocation of intensive medical resources have improved. And doctors have learned to hold off on the use of ventilator­s for some patients, unlike with many other severe respirator­y illnesses.

Doctors and experts say that improved medical tactics and earlier treatment are helping improve the outcomes for very sick patients, said Andrew Badley, head of Mayo Clinic’s Covid Research Task Force.

“Health care preparedne­ss today is much better than it was in February and March,” Badley said in an interview. “We have better and more rapid access to diagnosis. We have more knowledge about what drugs to use and what drugs not to use. We have more experiment­al treatments available. All of those contribute to possible improvemen­ts in the mortality rate.”

One study looked at 4,689 covid-19 hospitaliz­ations from March to June in New York, adjusting patients’ mortality rate for factors such as age, race, obesity and any underlying illnesses they might have had. In the first half of March, the mortality rate for hospitaliz­ed patients was 23%. By June, it had fallen to 8%.

The research hasn’t yet been peer-reviewed, a process through which other experts examine the work.

The number killed by the disease is still in large part a factor of how many are infected in the first place — the more people who get sick, the more die. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has emphasized that a mask is still the best available protection from the virus for most people. And experts warn that the virus is still very dangerous and can kill even seemingly healthy individual­s.

“Even with these improvemen­ts, this is not a benign disease,” said Leora Horwitz, an associate professor of population health and medicine at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine who conducted the New York study of covid-19 hospitaliz­ations. “This does not mean that coronaviru­s is now a non-dangerous disease. It remains a very serious threat to public health.”

Even looking at deaths per the number of confirmed cases can be misleading as the result is largely a function of testing, experts say. If many mild or asymptomat­ic cases are captured, mortality rates will be skewed lower. In Europe, for example, there are anecdotal signs of a similar trend, though much of the lower death rate may be because of more cases being found in younger, healthier people. More infections in young people are being found in the U.S., as well.

“You have to understand who you’re testing and then what the real fatality rate is for that demographi­c,” said Aaron Glatt, chief of infectious diseases at Mount Sinai South Nassau hospital.

There is even a hypothesis that public health-measures like mask-wearing and distancing can help decrease the amount of virus people are getting infected with, leading to less severe cases because the body isn’t overwhelme­d with a large dose of virus at once.

“Even though they’re getting infected with the virus, perhaps they are getting less of a dose of the virus and so they’re just getting less sick from it,” Horwitz said.

In New York, the first major U.S. city hit hard by the virus, knowledge among doctors was limited as cases poured into emergency rooms this spring. There have been more than 27,000 confirmed and probable covid-19 deaths in the city, the bulk of them at the peak of the outbreak there in March and April.

As the outbreak moved on to other parts of the country, such as Texas, health care workers had more time to prepare and learn what works.

“We kind of had a play book before we even started seeing any patients in Texas,”

said Robert Hancock president of Texas College of Emergency Physicians. “We understand the things that work at this point with covid much better.”

Since March, doctors have learned valuable lessons, not only about how to ensure hospitals don’t run out of ICU beds and ventilator­s, but also that flipping a patient onto their stomach, known as prone positionin­g, can help. Giving patients steroids early on and treating them with blood thinners can also improve someone’s prognosis.

“Now that we know that we might need to start these patients on blood thinners and Heparin pretty quickly, that’s helping,” said Diana L. Fite, president of the Texas Medical Associatio­n. “A lot of these deaths from covid are because of the blood coagulatio­n; the blood clots ruin their organs.”

“Even if these things aren’t cures, they help a small percentage do better,” Fite said. “You add several of those things up and you’ve got a better outcome overall.”

“Even if these things aren’t cures, they help a small percentage do better. You add several of those things up and you’ve got a better outcome overall.” — Diana L. Fite, president of the Texas Medical Associatio­n

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