Medicina (Dec 2022)

Quality of Life and Persistence of Symptoms in Outpatients after Recovery from COVID-19

  • Lizeth Guadalupe Gutiérrez-Canales,
  • Carolina Muñoz-Corona,
  • Isaac Barrera-Chávez,
  • Carlos Viloria-Álvarez,
  • Alejandro E. Macías,
  • Eduardo Guaní-Guerra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58121795
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 12
p. 1795

Abstract

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Background and Objectives: Patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 can have persistent symptoms after acute illness, which affects their quality of life (QoL). Research and data about this topic in Latin American ambulatory patients are scarce. Materials and Methods: We conducted an observational, prospective, transversal, and analytical study. To measure QoL, we used a validated Spanish version of the MOS/RAND 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36). Results: We included 206 outpatients in the study. A total of 73.3% patients had persistence of one or more symptoms. The most frequent persistent symptoms were fatigue (36.9%), anxiety (26.2%), and headache (24.8%). No statistically significant difference in the SF-36 QoL scores and the frequency of persistent COVID-19 symptoms was found when comparing the ≤5 and >5 months groups, except for myalgia, which was less frequently observed in the >5 months group after COVID-19 (26.2% vs. 14.1%, p Conclusion: Most outpatients had persistent COVID-19 symptoms after infection. Persistence of symptoms was associated with poor MCS and PCS. It is important to follow-up not only patients discharged from the hospital after SARS-CoV-2 infection, but also those under ambulatory management to provide them with rehabilitation and psychological therapy to improve their QoL.

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