[Thread] 1. What's happening with #COVID19 hospital admissions in SA?
Waasila Jassat, @nicd_sa:
- Over the past 14 days, admissions have decreased between 18% and 59% in all provinces
2. Your risk of hospitalisation due to an #Omicron infection is about 50% lower than in Wave 1,2,3 in SA (the risk for each wave = slightly different)
Most admissions in Wave 4 (#Omicron) = people between 20 and 39 years. In Wave 1,2,3 = admissions of people between 40 and 70.
3. Even though there were more admissions among younger people during our #Omicron wave, people's risk of admission still increased with age. So the older you were, the more likely you were to get very sick with #COVID.
4. Jassat:
Once you're admitted to hospital for #COVID19 in SA, your risk of dying of it is much higher if you were admitted to a public sector hospital than a private sector hospital.
5. Jassat:
In SA, the most common comorbidity associated with a #COVID19 patient who gets hospitalised, is hypertension (high blood pressure). The second most common comorbidity is diabetes and patients almost always have more than one comorbidity.
6. Jassat:
Comorbidities associated with #COVID19 hospital admission = change with age.
For people between 20-39 years (sexually reproductive years) HIV = most common comorbidity. For people of 40+ hypertension/diabetes = most common (lifestyle diseases = more common in 40+)
7. Jassat:
Ultimately, age is the strongest indicator of how sick you will get with #COVID19 - more so than any other comorbidity.
In SA, non-white people's risk of death of COVID = higher than white people's
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