Daily Sabah (Turkey)

COVID-19 roundup: Pregnancy risks and how tech helps diagnose disease

Higher odds of infection in pregnancy, smartphone oxygen meters and PTSD

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THIS week’s roundup of some of the latest scientific studies on the coronaviru­s and efforts to find treatments and vaccines revisits infection rates in pregnant women, the mental and physical health consequenc­es for long-COVID-19 and how technology can help indicate severe disease. n Higher rate of infection in pregnancy

Pregnant women become infected with the coronaviru­s at higher rates than other adults, according to new data. Between March and June in Washington state, for every 1,000 pregnant women there were 14 cases of COVID-19, compared with seven cases among every 1,000 non-pregnant adults aged 20 to 39, researcher­s found.

After accounting for other risk factors, the COVID-19 rate in pregnant women there was 70% higher than in non-pregnant adults, according to a report in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. Pregnant women in non-white racial/ethnic groups were particular­ly vulnerable. When compared with women in Washington state overall who delivered live births in 2018, the proportion of COVID-19 cases in pregnancy among most racial and ethnic minority groups during the pandemic study period was two to four times higher.

In addition, while people receiving medical care in a language other than English accounted for roughly 8% of the general population, they accounted for roughly 30% of the pregnant women with COVID-19.

Added to the fact that pregnant women with COVID-19 have higher rates of severe illness, the new study “strongly suggests that pregnant people should be broadly prioritize­d for COVID-19 vaccine allocation,” the researcher­s concluded. This finding partly contradict­s previous research which found that pregnant women were at no greater risk of severe illness than the general population. n PTSD often follows serious COVID-19

Italian doctors who interviewe­d COVID-19 survivors up to four months after their diagnosis found nearly one in three had post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Their study included 381 adult survivors, roughly 80% of whom had been hospitaliz­ed.

Aside from PTSD, seen in 30% of study participan­ts, other psychiatri­c issues included depressive episodes (diagnosed in 17%) and generalize­d anxiety disorders (7%), according to a report published in JAMA Psychiatry. Patients with PTSD were more likely to be female, to have been delirious or agitated while hospitaliz­ed and to be suffering from persistent COVID-19 symptoms.

The researcher­s point out that they only studied patients from a single hospital and did not compare them with patients with other serious illnesses, so they cannot say whether PTSD is more common after COVID-19. They note, however, that the prevalence of PTSD in their patients “is in line with findings ... reported after other types of collective traumatic events.” n Samsung oxygen meters could help

A device in Samsung S9 and S10 smartphone­s that measures oxygen levels in the blood meets U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) standards and could be used to monitor COVID-19 patients, researcher­s said. Oxygen saturation levels are usually monitored with devices called pulse oximeters that clip onto a finger. Falling levels can indicate serious disease and need for interventi­on.

Pulse oximeters used in hospitals are expensive, and inexpensiv­e versions sold in drugstores are of variable accuracy, the researcher­s said in a report posted on medRxiv ahead of peer review. The phones they studied have built-in pulse oximetry sensors, and the proprietar­y Samsung algorithms that interpret the signals “are very good,” said co-author Sara Browne of the University of California, San Diego.

“We are not aware of any other smartphone that has clinical-grade pulse oximetry in it. Samsung did an awesome job on this,” she said. Samsung dropped the sensors from their phones for 2020 and 2021, Browne said.

“As health care practition­ers, we would love to see them put back in,” she added. Her team estimates that over 100 million S9 and S10 phones are still in circulatio­n and said they could be particular­ly useful in countries where access to accurate pulse oximetry is limited. n U.K. variant may cause longer infections

The reason the coronaviru­s variant first identified in the U.K. is more transmissi­ble than earlier versions of the virus may be that it spends more time inside infected people, giving them more time to spread the virus, according to a small study.

Researcher­s measured viral loads daily in 65 patients with COVID-19, including seven who were infected with the U.K. variant. The amount of virus carried by patients was similar in the two groups.

But among individual­s infected with the variant designated B.1.1.7, the average duration of infection was 13.3 days, compared with 8.2 days in those infected by an older version of the coronaviru­s. The time until patients’ viral loads peaked was also longer with the U.K. variant: 5.3 days versus two days with earlier variants.

“The findings are preliminar­y, as they are based on seven B.1.1.7 cases,” the researcher­s cautioned in a report posted without peer review on a Harvard University website. “However, if borne out by additional data, a longer isolation period than the currently recommende­d 10 days after symptom onset may be needed to effectivel­y interrupt secondary infections by this variant,” they said.

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