Abstract

BackgroundThere is a lack of knowledge how patients with COVID-19 disease differ from patients with similar signs or symptoms (but who will have a diagnosis other than COVID-19) in the prehospital setting. The aim of this study was to compare the characteristics of these two patient groups met by the emergency medical services.MethodsAll prehospital patients after the World Health Organisation (WHO) pandemic declaration 11.3.2020 until 30.6.2020 were recruited for the study. The patients were screened using modified WHO criteria for suspected COVID-19. Data from the electronic prehospital patient reporting system were linked with hospital laboratory results to check the laboratory confirmation for COVID-19. For comparison, we divided the patients into two groups: screening- and laboratory-positive patients with a hospital diagnosis of COVID-19 and screening-positive but laboratory-negative patients who eventually received a different diagnosis in hospital.ResultsA total of 4157 prehospital patients fulfilled the criteria for suspected COVID-19 infection during the study period. Five-hundred-thirty-six (12.9%) of the suspected cases received a laboratory confirmation for COVID-19. The proportion of positive cases in relation to suspected ones peaked during the first 2 weeks after the declaration of the pandemic. In the comparison of laboratory-positive and laboratory-negative cases, there were clinically insignificant differences between the groups in age, tympanic temperature, systolic blood pressure, heart rate, on-scene time, urgency category of the call and mode of transportation. Foreign-language-speakers were overrepresented amongst the positive cases over native language speakers (26,6% vs. 7,4%, p < 0,001). The number of cases in which no signs or symptoms of COVID-19 disease were reported, but patients turned out to have a positive test result was 125 (0,3% of the whole EMS patient population and 11,9% of all verified COVID-19 patients encountered by the EMS).ConclusionsIn a sample of suspected COVID-19 patients, the laboratory-positive and laboratory-negative patients were clinically indistinguishable from each other during the prehospital assessment. Foreign-language-speakers had a high likelihood of having Covid-19. The modified WHO criteria still form the basis of screening of suspected COVID-19 patients in the prehospital setting.

Highlights

  • There is a lack of knowledge how patients with COVID-19 disease differ from patients with similar signs or symptoms in the prehospital setting

  • The emergency medical service (EMS) have been forced to raise the suspicion of COVID-19 with a low threshold if the patient has met the criteria as defined by the World Health Organisation (WHO) [6]

  • During the study period EMS encountered 40,777 patients of which 661 tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 regardless of whether Covid-19 infection was suspected by the EMS staff or not. (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

There is a lack of knowledge how patients with COVID-19 disease differ from patients with similar signs or symptoms (but who will have a diagnosis other than COVID-19) in the prehospital setting. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a tremendous impact on health care systems worldwide. The emergency medical service (EMS) is often the first link in the chain of care especially when the symptoms are severe [1,2,3,4,5]. The signs and symptoms in COVID-19 are not specific to the disease [6] and they are commonly encountered in several prehospital patient groups. There has been a lack of knowledge whether the confirmed COVID-19 patients differ clinically from other prehospital patients with similar signs or symptoms. The high number of suspected COVID-19 patients has burdened the emergency departments which may have led to disruption in standard diagnostic protocols and delayed the establishment of differential diagnoses

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