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Long‑term outcomes of older adults with acute COVID‑19 following inpatient geriatric rehabilitation: a prospective cohort study from the Republic of Ireland

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posted on 2024-08-27, 11:33 authored by Aoife McCarthyAoife McCarthy, Katie RobinsonKatie Robinson, Frances Dockery, Kara McLoughlinKara McLoughlin, Margaret O'Connor, Antonella Milos, Gillian Corey, Leonora Carey, Fiona Steed, Miriam Haaksma, Aoife WhistonAoife Whiston, Audrey TierneyAudrey Tierney, Rose GalvinRose Galvin

Background There is a paucity of research reporting the long-term outcomes of older adults who have completed geriatric rehabilitation following COVID-19.

Aim The primary aim of this study is to describe the long-term functional outcomes of a cohort of older adults with acute COVID-19 who have completed inpatient geriatric rehabilitation.

Methods This is a subgroup analysis of Irish data from a pan-European prospective cohort study. Functional ability, patient reported symptoms, and quality of life were measured using the Barthel index, the COVID-19 Yorkshire Rehabilitation Screen, and the EQ-5D-5L, respectively.

Results Thirty patients enrolled in the study. The rate of mortality was 23.3% at 6 months after discharge from rehabilitation. Patients achieved a return to pre-admission functional ability but reported a significant increase in patient reported symptoms and their quality of life did not return to pre-admission levels when assessed at 6 months after discharge from rehabilitation.

Conclusions Multidisciplinary rehabilitation for older adults with acute COVID-19 infection can assist patients to return to their premorbid functional ability. On discharge from rehabilitation, ongoing follow-up of older adults is recommended to assist them to negotiate and manage ongoing symptomatology such as breathlessness or fatigue.

History

Publication

Irish Journal of Medical Science, 2024

Publisher

Springer

Other Funding information

Open Access funding provided by the IReL Consortium The EU-COGER study was partly funded by the Leiden University Fund (Leiden Empowerment Fund, grant number LEF2106-2-47) and the work was supported by a ZonMw grant for the University Network of the Care sector South-Holland (UNC-ZH) (grant number 640001003). The funders had no role in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of the data in the writing of the report; and in the decision to submit the article for publication.

Also affiliated with

  • Health Research Institute (HRI)

Sustainable development goals

  • (3) Good Health and Well-being

Department or School

  • Allied Health
  • School of Medicine

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