Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical (Jul 2020)

Health system collapse 45 days after the detection of COVID-19 in Ceará, Northeast Brazil: a preliminary analysis

  • Daniele Rocha Queiros Lemos,
  • Sarah Mendes D’Angelo,
  • Luis Arthur Brasil Gadelha Farias,
  • Magda Moura Almeida,
  • Ricristhi Gonçalves Gomes,
  • Geovana Praça Pinto,
  • Josafa Nascimento Cavalcante Filho,
  • Levi Ximenes Feijão,
  • Ana Rita Paulo Cardoso,
  • Thaisy Brasil Ricarte Lima,
  • Pâmela Maria Costa Linhares,
  • Liana Perdigão Mello,
  • Tania Mara Coelho,
  • Luciano Pamplona de Góes Cavalcanti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0037-8682-0354-2020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53

Abstract

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Abstract INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 emerged in late 2019 and quickly became a serious public health problem worldwide. This study aim to describe the epidemiological course of cases and deaths due to COVID-19 and their impact on hospital bed occupancy rates in the first 45 days of the epidemic in the state of Ceará, Northeastern Brazil. METHODS: The study used an ecological design with data gathered from multiple government and health care sources. Data were analyzed using Epi Info software. RESULTS: The first cases were confirmed on March 15, 2020. After 45 days, 37,268 cases reported in 85.9% of Ceará’s municipalities, with 1,019 deaths. Laboratory test positivity reached 84.8% at the end of April, a period in which more than 700 daily tests were processed. The average age of cases was 67 (<1 - 101) years, most occurred in a hospital environment (91.9%), and 58% required hospitalization in an ICU bed. The average time between the onset of symptoms and death was 18 (1 - 56) days. Patients who died in the hospital had spent an average of six (0 - 40) days hospitalized. Across Ceará, the bed occupancy rate reached 71.3% in the wards and 80.5% in the ICU. CONCLUSIONS: The first 45 days of the COVID-19 epidemic in Ceará revealed a large number of cases and deaths, spreading initially among the population with a high socioeconomic status. Despite the efforts by the health services and social isolation measures the health system still collapsed.

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