Trends in COVID-19 hospital outcomes in England before and after vaccine introduction, a cohort study
Peter Kirwan, Andre Charlett, Paul Birrell, Suzanne Elgohari, Russell, Hope, Sema Mandal, Daniela De Angelis, Anne Presanis

TL;DR
This study analyzes COVID-19 hospital outcomes in England from March 2020 to September 2021, showing vaccination reduces mortality risk and hospital load impacts patient outcomes.
Contribution
It provides detailed trends in mortality and the impact of vaccination and hospital load on COVID-19 hospital outcomes in England.
Findings
Hospital fatality risk decreased from 40.3% to 8.1%.
Vaccination reduced hazard of mortality by 29-44%.
Higher hospital load increased mortality hazard by 23%.
Abstract
Widespread vaccination campaigns have changed the landscape for COVID-19, vastly altering symptoms and reducing morbidity and mortality. We estimate trends in mortality by month of admission and vaccination status among those hospitalised with COVID-19 in England between March 2020 to September 2021, controlling for demographic factors and hospital load. Among 259,727 hospitalised COVID-19 cases, 51,948 (20.0%) experienced mortality in hospital. Hospitalised fatality risk ranged from 40.3% (95% confidence interval 39.4-41.3%) in March 2020 to 8.1% (7.2-9.0%) in June 2021. Older individuals and those with multiple co-morbidities were more likely to die or else experienced longer stays prior to discharge. Compared to unvaccinated people, the hazard of hospitalised mortality was 0.71 (0.67-0.77) with a first vaccine dose, and 0.56 (0.52-0.61) with a second vaccine dose. Compared to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · COVID-19 and healthcare impacts · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research
