Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2021)

Characteristics, Comorbidities, and Data Gaps for Coronavirus Disease Deaths, Tennessee, USA

  • John James Parker,
  • Rany Octaria,
  • Miranda D. Smith,
  • Samantha J. Chao,
  • Mary Beth Davis,
  • Celia Goodson,
  • Jon Warkentin,
  • Denise Werner,
  • Mary-Margaret A. Fill

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2710.211070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 10
pp. 2521 – 2528

Abstract

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As of March 2021, coronavirus disease (COVID-19) had led to >500,000 deaths in the United States, and the state of Tennessee had the fifth highest number of cases per capita. We reviewed the Tennessee Department of Health COVID-19 surveillance and chart-abstraction data during March 15‒August 15, 2020. Patients who died from COVID-19 were more likely to be older, male, and Black and to have underlying conditions (hereafter comorbidities) than case-patients who survived. We found 30.4% of surviving case-patients and 20.3% of deceased patients had no comorbidity information recorded. Chart-abstraction captured a higher proportion of deceased case-patients with >1 comorbidity (96.3%) compared with standard surveillance deaths (79.0%). Chart-abstraction detected higher rates of each comorbidity except for diabetes, which had similar rates among standard surveillance and chart-abstraction. Investing in public health data collection infrastructure will be beneficial for the COVID-19 pandemic and future disease outbreaks.

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