Since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, the scientific community has explored determinants of Covid 19 disease severity. However, the majority of studies are based on in-hospital patients with high risk of collider- or selection bias. The present investigation details risk factors associated with overall mortality, hospitalization and intensive care unit (ICU) admission in Covid-19 infections, with complete population coverage and high-resolution data on patient characteristics and comorbid conditions This population-based observational study comprises all residents 18 years and older in Stockholm Region—1.8 million inhabitants—using the real-time Covid-19 monitoring framework. The observation period lasted between March 1 to December 31, 2020. Hazard ratios (HR) for risk factors of Covid-19 disease severity were assessed using Cox proportional hazard models. In total, 3322 deaths, 11,508 hospitalizations and 1423 ICU-admissions related to Covid-19 occurred during the study period. Kidney failure, diabetes and obesity increased risk of mortality and so did heart failure and ischemic heart disease. However, atrial fibrillation and hypertension did not. Risk of hospitalization follow a similar pattern, whereas admission to intensive care differs; triage processes where clearly present as certain co-morbid conditions were associated with lower ICU admission. Observed differences in risk of mortality and hospitalization among patients with Covid 19 raise important questions about potentially protective comedication which will be further addressed using the real-time Covid-19 monitoring framework.
Influenza remains an important reason for the hospitalization of children, especially during the first years of life. The increasing proportion of influenza B may have to be considered when recommending influenza vaccines.
The epidemiology and genetic variability of circulating respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) strains in Stockholm during the season 2002-2003 were studied in consecutive RSV isolates derived from respiratory samples and diagnosed in the laboratory. Two hundred thirty-four viruses were sequenced. The samples were mainly from children under 1 year old (79%). The phylogeny of the N-terminal part of the G gene was studied after amplification and sequencing. One hundred fifty-two viruses belonged to subgroup B and 82 to subgroup A. The subgroup A viruses could be further divided into genotypes GA2 (25) and GA5 (57) and the subgroup B viruses into GB3 (137) and SAB1 (15) strains. These strains clustered with subgroup A and subgroup B strains from Kenya from the same period, as well as with strains from Great Britain from 1995 to 1998. The dominance of subgroup B strains in Stockholm during 2002-2003 is in agreement with findings from other parts of the world during the same years. Only two genotypes of subgroup A, GA2 and GA5, were circulating during this time, and GA2 has been circulating in Sweden for more than 20 years. Consecutive strains from the same individual displayed no variability in the sequenced region, which was also true of strains that had been passaged in cell cultures.
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