中国帕金森病患者在零COVID期间和之后的生活和疾病状况:在线调查。

IF 10.8 1区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Translational Neurodegeneration Pub Date : 2024-02-06 DOI:10.1186/s40035-024-00399-9
Pei Huang, Yu-Yan Tan, Biao Chen, Hui-Fang Shang, Li-Juan Wang, Chun-Feng Liu, Ling Chen, Ying Chang, Han Wang, Xue-Lian Wang, Xiao-Guang Lei, Li-Fen Yao, Yang Yu, Zheng Ye, Hai-Bo Chen, Sheng-Di Chen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:人们对COVID-19大流行在不同阶段对帕金森病(PD)患者的影响知之甚少。本研究旨在评估帕金森病患者在零COVID政策期间和零COVID政策结束后的生活和疾病状况:这项多中心横断面研究包括分别于 2022 年 5 月 30 日至 6 月 30 日和 2023 年 1 月 1 日至 2 月 28 日对中国 PD 患者进行的两次在线调查。调查问卷包括四个部分:(1)COVID-19感染情况;(2)对运动症状和非运动症状的影响;(3)对日常生活和社会生活的影响;(4)对PD疾病管理的影响:共有 1764 名帕金森氏症患者参与了首次在线调查,其中 200 名患者有过封锁经历,3 名患者为 COVID-19 阳性(0.17%)。此外,537 名患者参与了第二次在线调查,467 名患者感染了 COVID-19(86.96%)。(1)在零COVID期间,所有COVID-19阳性患者都有轻微的COVID-19症状,没有死亡报告。零 COVID 之后,83.51%的 COVID-19 阳性患者症状轻微。COVID-19 阳性 PD 患者的总死亡率和住院死亡率分别为 3.21% 和 30.00%。(2)在零 COVID 期间,49.43% 的 PD 患者报告 PD 相关症状恶化(锁定与未锁定相比,60.50% 对 48.02%,P = 0.0009)。零 COVID 后,54.93% 的 PD 患者报告 PD 相关症状恶化(COVID-19 阳性 vs. COVID-19 阴性,59.31% vs. 25.71%,P=0.0009):在零 COVID 政策期间或之后,COVID-19 大流行加剧了帕金森病患者的运动和非运动症状。此外,帕金森病患者还经历了突出的心理健康问题、日常活动的改变以及经济和护理负担的增加。COVID-19 大流行改变了帕金森病的管理方式,对在线购药和康复的需求不断增加。
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Life and disease status of patients with Parkinson's disease during and after zero-COVID in China: an online survey.

Background: Little is known about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) at different stages of the pandemic. This study aims to assess the lives and disease status of PD patients during the zero-COVID policy period and after ending the zero-COVID policy.

Methods: This multicenter cross-sectional study included two online surveys among PD patients in China, from May 30 to June 30 in 2022 and from January 1 to February 28 in 2023, respectively. The survey questionnaires contained four sections: (1) status of COVID-19 infection; (2) impact on motor and non-motor symptoms; (3) impact on daily and social lives; and (4) impact on PD disease management.

Results: A total of 1764 PD patients participated in the first online survey, with 200 patients having lockdown experience and 3 being COVID-19-positive (0.17%). In addition, 537 patients participated in the second online survey, with 467 patients having COVID-19 infection (86.96%). (1) During zero-COVID, all of the COVID-19-positive patients had mild symptoms of COVID-19 and no death was reported. After zero-COVID, 83.51% of the COVID-19-positive patients had mild symptoms. The overall death rate and inpatient mortality rate of COVID-19-positive PD patients were 3.21% and 30.00%, respectively. (2) During zero-COVID, 49.43% of PD patients reported worsening of PD-related symptoms (lockdown vs. unlockdown, 60.50% vs. 48.02%, P = 0.0009). After zero-COVID, 54.93% of PD patients reported worsening of PD-related symptoms (COVID-19 positive vs. COVID-19 negative, 59.31% vs. 25.71%, P < 0.0001). (3) During zero-COVID, 62.36% of patients felt worried, and 'limited outdoor activities' (55.39%) was the top reason for mental health problems. After zero-COVID, 59.03% of patients felt worried, with 'poor health' (58.10%) being the top reason. The PD patients tended to change their daily activities from offline to online, and their economic and caregiver burdens increased both during and after zero-COVID. (4) Most PD patients would like to choose online rehabilitation during (69.56%) and after zero-COVID (69.27%). The demand for online medication purchasing also increased during (47.00%) and after zero-COVID (26.63%).

Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic aggravated the motor and non-motor symptoms of PD patients either during or after the zero-COVID policy period. The PD patients also experienced prominent mental health problems, changes in daily activities, and increases in economic and caregiver burdens. The COVID-19 pandemic has changed ways of PD management with increasing demands for online medication purchasing and rehabilitation.

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来源期刊
Translational Neurodegeneration
Translational Neurodegeneration Neuroscience-Cognitive Neuroscience
CiteScore
19.50
自引率
0.80%
发文量
44
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Translational Neurodegeneration, an open-access, peer-reviewed journal, addresses all aspects of neurodegenerative diseases. It serves as a prominent platform for research, therapeutics, and education, fostering discussions and insights across basic, translational, and clinical research domains. Covering Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, and other neurodegenerative conditions, it welcomes contributions on epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, prevention, drug development, rehabilitation, and drug delivery. Scientists, clinicians, and physician-scientists are encouraged to share their work in this specialized journal tailored to their fields.
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