%0 Journal Article %J Int J Environ Res Public Health %D 2020 %T Time between Symptom Onset, Hospitalisation and Recovery or Death: Statistical Analysis of Belgian COVID-19 Patients. %A Faes, Christel %A Steven Abrams %A Dominique Van Beckhoven %A Geert Meyfroidt %A Vlieghe, Erika %A Hens, Niel %K Adult %K Aged %K Belgium %K Coronavirus Infections %K COVID-19 %K Data Interpretation, Statistical %K Hospitalization %K Humans %K Length of Stay %K middle aged %K nursing homes %K Pandemics %K Pneumonia, Viral %K Time-to-Treatment %K Treatment Outcome %K Young adult %X

There are different patterns in the COVID-19 outbreak in the general population and amongst nursing home patients. We investigate the time from symptom onset to diagnosis and hospitalization or the length of stay (LoS) in the hospital, and whether there are differences in the population. Sciensano collected information on 14,618 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 admissions from 114 Belgian hospitals between 14 March and 12 June 2020. The distributions of different event times for different patient groups are estimated accounting for interval censoring and right truncation of the time intervals. The time between symptom onset and hospitalization or diagnosis are similar, with median length between symptom onset and hospitalization ranging between 3 and 10.4 days, depending on the age of the patient (longest delay in age group 20-60 years) and whether or not the patient lives in a nursing home (additional 2 days for patients from nursing home). The median LoS in hospital varies between 3 and 10.4 days, with the LoS increasing with age. The hospital LoS for patients that recover is shorter for patients living in a nursing home, but the time to death is longer for these patients. Over the course of the first wave, the LoS has decreased.

%B Int J Environ Res Public Health %V 17 %8 2020 10 17 %G eng %N 20 %R 10.3390/ijerph17207560