Dependence in Activities of Daily Living as a Predictor of In-Hospital Mortality During COVID-19 in Older Individuals.

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Kategorie Primary study
ZeitungLife (Basel, Switzerland)
Year 2025
Activities of Daily Living (ADL) are fundamental tasks for individuals to manage their basic needs. Our study aims to examine ADL at admission (adADL) and the Pre-COVID-19 to Admission ADL Difference (ADL-change) as potential predictors of in-hospital mortality. This is a retrospective analysis of clinical data (including the Katz index for ADL) from 141 older patients aged at least 65 years hospitalized in a COVID-19-dedicated unit (not requiring ICU) from September 2021 until January 2022 in Poznań, Poland. Thirty patients (21.3% of all) died during hospitalization. Non-survivors were older than survivors, exhibited lower oxygen saturation, more severe inflammation, higher D-dimer concentrations, and were more commonly prescribed antibiotics. The AUC for in-hospital mortality was for adADL: 0.7417 (95% CI: 0.6478-0.8357; p < 0.0001) and for ADL-change: 0.6869 (95% CI: 0.579-0.7928; p = 0.0018). The corresponding cut-offs were 0 for adADL and 3 for ADL-change. Cox proportional hazard models yielded hazard ratios of 3.57 (95% CI 1.57-8.10; p = 0.0024) for adADL and 3.78 (95% CI 1.49-9.54; p = 0.005) for ADL-change. ADL assessment offers valuable insights into in-hospital mortality among older COVID-19 patients. Monitoring ADL in these patients indicates high-risk individuals for in-hospital death. Integrating ADL into routine clinical practice might enhance care for older patients.
Epistemonikos ID: ab20112180f69d3f26aa6554b1a44233434c764c
First added on: Feb 26, 2025