Quality of life of COVID-19 recovered patients in Bangladesh

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Quality of life of COVID-19 recovered patients in Bangladesh

13, October 2021 |

Authors:

Hawlader MDH Rashid MU Khan MAS Tasnim Ara Nabi MH Haque MMA Matin KF Hossain MA Rahman MA Hossain M Saha S Manna RM Arafat MY Barsha SY Maliha R Khan JZ Kha S Hasan SMR Hasan M Siddiquea SR Khan J Islam AMK Rashid R Nur N Khalid O Bari F Rahman ML

Abstract


Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) quickly surged the whole world and affected peo- ple’s physical, mental, and social health thereby upsetting their quality of life. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the quality of life (QoL) of COVID-19 positive patients after recovery in Bangladesh. This was a study of adult (aged �18 years) COVID-19 individuals from eight divisions of Bangladesh diagnosed and confirmed by Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) from June 2020 to November 2020. Given a response rate of 60% in a pilot study, a random list of 6400 COVID-19 patients was generated to recruit approximately 3200 patients from eight divisions of Bangladesh and finally a total of 3244 participants could be recruited for the current study. The validated Bangla version of the World Health Organization Quality of Life Brief (WHOQOL-BREF) questionnaire was used to assess the QoL. Data were analyzed by STATA (Version 16.1) and R (Version 4.0.0). All the procedures were conducted following ethical approval and in accordance with the Decla- ration of Helsinki. The mean scores of QoL were highest for the physical domain (68.25 ±14.45) followed by social (65.10±15.78), psychological (63.28±15.48), and environmental domain (62.77±13.07). Psychological and physical domain scores among females were sig- nificantly lower than the males (p<0.001). The overall quality of life was lower in persons having a chronic disease. Participants over 45 years of age were 52% less likely to enjoy good physical health than the participants aged below 26 years (AOR: 0.48, CI: 0.28–0.82). The quality of life of employed participants was found 1.8 times higher than the unemployed (AOR: 1.80, CI: 1.11–2.91). Those who were admitted to hospitals during infection had a low QoL score in physical, psychological, and socials domains. However, QoL improved in all aspect except the psychological domain for each day passed after the diagnosis.