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Physical, psychiatric and cognitive problems were seen in those discharged to long-term acute care hospitals.
Small delayed benefit seen for loneliness, but larger improvements seen in perceived stress
44.9% of veterans with COVID-19 infection, and 35.3% without, reported that they could do less than before the pandemic.
In some individuals, there were many viral amino acid substitutions, indicating strong positive selection.
The greatest increase in utilization was seen for veterans aged 85 years and older (6.1 visits) versus those aged 20 to 44 years (4.8 visits).
The findings were clinically significant at three and 12 months versus usual care.
The findings were seen for adults aged 65 years and older and for those aged 18 years and older with end-stage renal disease.
The risk for death was found to be exacerbated by comorbidities.
A systematic literature review identifies an increased risk but with very low certainty.
Associations were seen for working on the hospital unit, mood disturbances and sleep disturbances with depression and anxiety.