Porterville Recorder

The coronaviru­s waiting game

- By RONG-GONG LIN II

It can take time for COVID-19 symptoms to worsen following exposure to the coronaviru­s. While most people only experience mild or no symptoms at all, it can take roughly a week or so before severe illness strikes for those who do end up experienci­ng life- threatenin­g symptoms.

Here are some key facts about how long it can take for COVID-19 symptoms to worsen among patients who develop severe illness, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

After onset of illness or symptoms, the median time it can take to start feeling shortness of breath is about five to eight days. After onset of illness or symptoms, the median time it can take to start to experience acute respirator­y distress syndrome is about eight to 12 days. After onset of illness or symptoms, the median time it can take to be admitted to the intensive care unit is about 10 to 12 days.

“Clinicians should be aware of the potential for some patients to rapidly deteriorat­e one week after illness onset,” the CDC said on its website.

Chances of serious illnessin general, only about one in five people with COVID-19 experience severe or critical illness.

Among more than 44,000 people with COVID-19 in China, researcher­s found the following:

81% experience­d mild or moderate symptoms, up to mild pneumonia.14% experience­d severe symptoms, such as shortness of breath, a lack of adequate oxygen, or more advanced pneumonia.5% experience­d critical symptoms, including respirator­y failure, shock or multiorgan system dysfunctio­n.

Of those who were diagnosed with coronaviru­s infection, 2.3% died.

Among those cases, the rate at which those who were infected with the coronaviru­s died — a percentage known as the case fatality rate — is highest among older people:

Of COVID-19 patients aged 80 or older, 14.8% died;of those in their 70s, 8% died;of those in their 60s, 3.6% died;of those in their 50s, 1.3% died;of those in their 40s, 0.4% died; And among those younger than 40, 0.2% died. According to the CDC, after accounting for difference­s in age and prevalence of underlying medical conditions, mortality associated with COVID-19 in the U.S. is similar to that from China.

Among U.S. cases of COVID-19 where researcher­s understand what happened to the patient, 19% were hospitaliz­ed, and 6% were admitted to the intensive care unit.

For those who are hospitaliz­edamong patients who do become hospitaliz­ed, about 26% to 32% have been admitted to the intensive care unit, according to the CDC.

Among those who entered the intensive care unit, the mortality rate among those patients ranged from 39% to 72%.

The median length of hospitaliz­ation among those who survived was 10 to 13 days.

How long it takes for symptoms to beginit takes a median of four to five days for symptoms of COVID-19 to begin following a person’s exposure to the coronaviru­s, although, generally speaking, it can take as long as 14 days.

How long it takes for coronaviru­s tests to detect infectiong­etting tested too early after a person is exposed to the coronaviru­s can yield a negative test result, even though the virus has entered the body and has started.

“A single negative test does not mean you will remain negative at any time point after that test,” the CDC says.

What are guidelines for those who are found to be infected?people found to be infected with the coronaviru­s should be isolated from people who are not infected.

They should remain isolated until at least 10 days since symptoms first appeared, at least 24 hours with no fever without taking fever-reducing drugs, and other symptoms are improving. The loss of taste and smell “may persist for weeks or months after recovery and need not delay the end of isolation,” the CDC said.

Those with severe COVID-19 illness — like those needing care in a hospital and needing oxygen — may need to stay in isolation for possibly up to 20 days after the symptoms began.

People testing positive for the virus but with no symptoms can resume being with other people after 10 days have passed since the first positive test. Doctors might suggest that the patient get tested repeatedly to end the isolation earlier, such as through two consecutiv­e negative tests done at least 24 hours apart.

What are guidelines for those who came into contact with infected people?people who have been in “close contact” with someone who has COVID-19 should be quarantine­d, which means staying away from others until they know if they’ve been infected.

The CDC defines close contact as being within six feet of someone who has COVID-19 for 15 or more minutes; providing care to someone with disease; having direct physical contact with an infected person, such as through a hug or a kiss; sharing eating or drinking utensils; or being sneezed or coughed out by the infected person.

The CDC says those under quarantine should stay at home for 14 days after their last contact with a person with COVID-19, and monitor for fever, cough and shortness of breath.

“Even if you test negative for COVID-19 or feel healthy, you should stay home (quarantine) since symptoms may appear two to 14 days after exposure to the virus,” the CDC says.

How long is an infected person infectious for? The CDC says that people with mild to moderate COVID-19 illness may produce infectious coronaviru­s that can infect other people for up to 10 days after symptoms begin.

But a small percentage of those who have severe COVID-19 illness can remain infectious of up to 20 days.

Can people be reinfected with the coronaviru­s after getting better?there’s limited data about reinfectio­n with the coronaviru­s after recovery from COVID-19, according to the CDC. “This is a new virus, and CDC is actively working to learn more,” the agency said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States