Pain Complaints and Intubation Risk in COVID-19 Patients: A Retrospective Cross-Sectional Analysis
Michael Reimer, Victor Lee, Oluseyi Obadeyi, Kaitlyn S Reimer, Christopher Tarver, Duc A Tran, Eugene Pak

TL;DR
This study finds that hospitalized COVID-19 patients who report pain are less likely to need intubation, suggesting pain complaints may be a sign of better prognosis.
Contribution
The study is the first to show a negative correlation between pain complaints and intubation risk in hospitalized COVID-19 patients using a large dataset.
Findings
Pain complaints in hospitalized COVID-19 patients were associated with a lower likelihood of intubation.
Specific pain types like myalgia and headache showed the strongest negative correlation with intubation.
The study used over 2.4 million data points to analyze the relationship between pain and intubation.
Abstract
Purpose In late 2019, the SARS-CoV-2 virus spread to become a worldwide pandemic with continued impact today. The disease severity is categorized based on age, comorbid conditions, and respiratory symptoms, but the clinical significance of pain reports and their correlation with life-sustaining treatment is not addressed much in the literature. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between pain reports in patients with COVID-19 and the likelihood of intubation. Methods A retrospective cross-sectional analysis was performed compiling representative billing codes for pain complaints using the Epic Cosmos data set, a HIPAA limited data set of more than 226 million patients from 236 health systems using Epic software. For validation of this method, three months of institutional-specific Cosmos billing code data were compared to chart-reviewed pain complaints at a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders · Respiratory Support and Mechanisms · Airway Management and Intubation Techniques
