COVID-19 and spinal cord injury and disease: results of an international survey
- PMID: 32296046
- PMCID: PMC7156806
- DOI: 10.1038/s41394-020-0275-8
COVID-19 and spinal cord injury and disease: results of an international survey
Abstract
Study design: An online survey.
Objectives: To query the international spinal cord medicine community's engagement with and response to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and to assess pandemic-specific information needs and patient concerns.
Setting: An international collaboration of authors and participants.
Methods: Two near-identical surveys (one English and one Spanish language) were distributed via the internet. Responses from those questions shared between the surveys were pooled then analyzed; four questions' responses (those not shared) were analyzed separately.
Results: A total of 783 responses were submitted from six continents. Few participants (5.8%) had tested their outpatients with SCI/D for COVID-19; only 4.4% reported having a patient with SCI/D with the virus. Of respondents who worked at an inpatient facility, 53.3% reported that only individuals with symptoms were being screened and 29.9% said that no screening was occurring. Participants relayed several concerns offered by their patients with SCI/D, including vulnerability to infection (76.9%) and fragility of caretaker supply (42%), and those living in countries with guaranteed health care were more likely to report widespread availability of COVID-19 testing than were those living in countries without universal care, χ2 (3, N = 625) = 46.259, p < 0.001.
Conclusion: There is substantial variability in the rehabilitation medicine community in COVID-19 screening practices and availability of screening kits. People living with SCI/D are expressing legitimate and real concerns about their vulnerability to COVID-19. More and rapid work is needed to address these concerns and to standardize best-practice protocols throughout the rehabilitation community.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
Comment in
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Personal hygiene care in persons with spinal cord injury during the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown: an Indian perspective.Spinal Cord Ser Cases. 2020 Aug 20;6(1):76. doi: 10.1038/s41394-020-00328-8. Spinal Cord Ser Cases. 2020. PMID: 32820154 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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References
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- World Health Organization Website. 2020. https://www.who.int/. Accessed 26 March 2020.
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