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Hospital characteristics associated with COVID-19 mortality: data from the multicenter cohort Brazilian Registry.

Maíra Viana Rego Souza E SilvaPatricia Klarmann ZiegelmannVandack NobreVirginia Mara Reis GomesAna Paula Beck da Silva EtgesAlexandre Vargas SchwarzboldAline Gabrielle Sousa NunesAmanda de Oliveira MaurílioAna Luiza Bahia Alves ScottonAndré Soares de Moura CostaAndressa Barreto GlaeserBárbara Lopes FaraceBruno Nunes RibeiroCarolina Marques RamosChristiane Correa Rodrigues CiminiCíntia Alcantara de CarvalhoClaudete RempelDaniel Vitório SilveiraDaniela Dos Reis CarazaiDaniela PonceElayne Crestani PereiraEmanuele Marianne Souza KrogerEuler Roberto Fernandes ManentiEvelin Paola de Almeida CenciFernanda Barbosa LucasFernanda Costa Dos SantosFernando AnschauFernando Antonio BotoniFernando Graça AranhaFilipe Carrilho de AguiarFrederico BartolazziGabriela Petry CrestaniGiovanna Grunewald ViettaGuilherme Fagundes NascimentoHelena Carolina NoalHelena DuaniHeloisa Reniers ViannaHenrique Cerqueira GuimarãesJoice Coutinho de AlvarengaJosé Miguel ChatkinJúlia Drumond Parreiras de MoraisJuliana da Silva Nogueira CarvalhoJuliana Rodrigues Machado RúgoloKaren Brasil RuschelLara de Barros Wanderley GomesLeonardo Seixas de OliveiraLiege Barella ZandonáLílian Santos PinheiroLiliane Souto PachecoLuanna da Silva Monteiro MenezesLucas de Deus SousaLuis Cesar Souto de MouraLuisa Elem Almeida SantosLuiz Antônio NasiMáderson Alvares de Souza CabralMaiara Anschau FlorianiMaíra Dias SouzaMarcelo CarneiroMariana Frizzo de GodoyMarilia Mastrocolla de Almeida CardosoMatheus Carvalho Alves NogueiraMauro Oscar Soares de Souza LimaMeire Pereira de FigueiredoMilton Henriques Guimarães-JúniorNatália da Cunha Severino SampaioNeimy Ramos de OliveiraPedro Guido Soares AndradePedro Ledic AssafPetrônio José de Lima MartelliRaphael Castro MartinsReginaldo Aparecido ValacioRoberta PozzaRochele Mosmann MenezesRodolfo Lucas Silva MouratoRoger Mendes de AbreuRufino de Freitas SilvaSaionara Cristina FranciscoSilvana Mangeon Mereilles GuimarãesSilvia Ferreira AraújoTalita Fischer OliveiraTatiana KurtzTatiani Oliveira FereguettiThainara Conceição de OliveiraYara Cristina Neves Marques Barbosa RibeiroYuri Carlotto RamiresCarísi Anne PolanczykMilena Soriano Marcolino
Published in: Internal and emergency medicine (2022)
The COVID-19 pandemic caused unprecedented pressure over health care systems worldwide. Hospital-level data that may influence the prognosis in COVID-19 patients still needs to be better investigated. Therefore, this study analyzed regional socioeconomic, hospital, and intensive care units (ICU) characteristics associated with in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 patients admitted to Brazilian institutions. This multicenter retrospective cohort study is part of the Brazilian COVID-19 Registry. We enrolled patients ≥ 18 years old with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 admitted to the participating hospitals from March to September 2020. Patients' data were obtained through hospital records. Hospitals' data were collected through forms filled in loco and through open national databases. Generalized linear mixed models with logit link function were used for pooling mortality and to assess the association between hospital characteristics and mortality estimates. We built two models, one tested general hospital characteristics while the other tested ICU characteristics. All analyses were adjusted for the proportion of high-risk patients at admission. Thirty-one hospitals were included. The mean number of beds was 320.4 ± 186.6. These hospitals had eligible 6556 COVID-19 admissions during the study period. Estimated in-hospital mortality ranged from 9.0 to 48.0%. The first model included all 31 hospitals and showed that a private source of funding (β = - 0.37; 95% CI - 0.71 to - 0.04; p = 0.029) and location in areas with a high gross domestic product (GDP) per capita (β = - 0.40; 95% CI - 0.72 to - 0.08; p = 0.014) were independently associated with a lower mortality. The second model included 23 hospitals and showed that hospitals with an ICU work shift composed of more than 50% of intensivists (β = - 0.59; 95% CI - 0.98 to - 0.20; p = 0.003) had lower mortality while hospitals with a higher proportion of less experienced medical professionals had higher mortality (β = 0.40; 95% CI 0.11-0.68; p = 0.006). The impact of those association increased according to the proportion of high-risk patients at admission. In-hospital mortality varied significantly among Brazilian hospitals. Private-funded hospitals and those located in municipalities with a high GDP had a lower mortality. When analyzing ICU-specific characteristics, hospitals with more experienced ICU teams had a reduced mortality.
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