Inpatient care for urological patients in a pandemic of the coronavirus disease-covid-19 infection

2021 
Since the first cases of coronavirus disease were detected in Wuhan (Hubei Province, China) in December 2019, the spread distribution of COVID-19 has expanded so much that the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic. The most common symptoms of corona-virus infection are fever (85-90%), cough (65-70%), general weakness (35-40%), shortness of breath or feeling short of breath (15-20%);less common symptoms such as myalgia, headaches, sore throat and chills (10-15%). Currently, cases of infection are recorded in almost all countries of the world, there is a daily increase in the number of infected by an average of 100,000, and the death toll by average estimates is over 3,000,000. At present time, the “leading” position in the number of cases of COVID-19 detected belongs to the United States, in which over the entire observation period, more than 32,000,000 thousand cases were recorded. Another badly affected region is Europe, in which more than 43,000,000 thousand cases were recorded. The rapid growth in the number of newly diagnosed cases of COVID-19 dictates the need to search for optimal ways of providing medical care. It is obvious that inpatient practice carrying high risk of infection for patients as well as for medical stuff. Moreover, postoperative mortality rate in infected patients may be as high as 20%. Since the pandemic onset many authors and societies have provided recommendations on how the risk of infection during inpatient practice should be reduced. This article discusses the options for providing inpatient care to urological patients in a pandemic of the coronary viral infection COVID-19.
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