The Free Press Journal

Maybe ventilator­s won’t help

-

Most people in their advance age, especially among those who are infected by the novel coronaviru­s and are suffering from some underlying disease such as hypertensi­on, diabetes, heart disease and obesity, have lower rates of survival, even if they are put on ventilator­s, a study said.

The Washington Post cited the study, published in the Lancet, on Tuesday, saying that most elderly Covid-19 patients put on ventilator­s at two New York hospitals did not survive.

“We had no idea how horrific this would be,” Max O’Donnell, the senior author of the study and a pulmonolog­ist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, was quoted by the Post. “Definitely not just the flu,” he added.

The research focused on 257 critically ill adults, representi­ng a little under onequarter of the confirmed coronaviru­s patients admitted at the two hospitals in northern Manhattan between March 2 and April 1. The median age of critically ill patients was 62 years, and two-thirds of them were male.

Of the critically ill patients studied, 39 per cent had died by April 28, and 37 per cent remained hospitalis­ed at Milstein and Allen hospitals.

No critically ill patients under the age of 30 died at the two hospitals, O’Donnell said, and only a small number of them had to be put on ventilator­s. But more than 80 per cent of people over 80 who went on a ventilator did not survive, he said.

In the second finding, the study also said that discharge and mortality rates for the most critically ill patients have varied widely among hospital systems.

“The mortality rate (for patients on ventilator­s) creeps up to 70 per cent when you’re over the age of 70,” Thomas McGinn, deputy physician in chief at Northwell Health, told the Lancet. “If your mom’s 85 and not well, they should know what the potential is for surviving before they have a ventilator placed,” he added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India