PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Alcohol withdrawal rates among hospitalized patients rose 34% during COVID pandemic

First study to quantify impact of COVID-19 pandemic on alcohol withdrawal among hospitalized patients

2021-03-03
(Press-News.org) During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, there was a 34% increase in alcohol withdrawal (AW) rates among hospitalized patients at ChristianaCare, according to a research letter published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

The study is believed to be the first to quantify the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on alcohol withdrawal among hospitalized patients.

The retrospective study conducted at ChristianaCare, one of the largest health systems in the mid-Atlantic region, found that the rate of alcohol withdrawal in hospitalized patients was consistently higher in 2020 compared to both 2019 and the average of 2019 and 2018.

"Our findings are relevant nationally and serve as a clarion call to alert other hospital systems to the increased need to screen for and treat alcohol use withdrawal, and to refer patients for ongoing alcohol treatment," said Terry Horton, M.D., ChristianaCare's chief of Addiction Medicine and senior author on the research letter.

Alcohol withdrawal is a complex syndrome that occurs when a heavy drinker suddenly stops or significantly reduces alcohol intake. If left untreated, alcohol withdrawal can progress to severe and potentially deadly symptoms of delirium tremens, characterized by extreme confusion, agitation, seizures and hallucinations.

"There has been concern that pandemic-associated stress, restrictions and reduced access to recovery supports would result in more alcohol consumption, increasing the risk that some will develop or worsen alcohol use disorders, but it has been difficult to measure these impacts," Dr. Horton said.

"Our study makes use of ChristianaCare's ongoing surveillance for alcohol withdrawal, which can occur when patients admitted to the hospital are cut off from all sources of alcohol," he said.

The team used a revised Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol tool to identify hospitalized alcohol withdrawal patients at ChristianaCare's two Delaware hospitals, Christiana Hospital and Wilmington Hospital, from their electronic health records, between Jan. 1, 2018 and Sept. 22, 2020.

Summary statistics were calculated for patients in three time periods in 2020, before the stay-at-home order (Jan. 1 - March 24); during the stay-at-home order (March 25 - May 31) and after the stay-at-home order (June 1 - Sept. 22). Incidence rates of alcohol withdrawal were compared for corresponding biweekly periods in 2018, 2019, and 2020.

Adjusting for seasonal variations, alcohol withdrawal in hospitalized patients increased overall by 34 percent during the pandemic from March 25 - Sept. 22, as compared to the same period in 2019, with the largest incidence (84 percent) occurring in the last two weeks of the stay-at home order.

The study population included 340 patients diagnosed with alcohol withdrawal before the stay-at home order, 231 during the stay-at-home order, and 507 after the stay-at-home order. Patient characteristics were similar between the three time periods, but the highest rates were seen in middle-aged white men (mean age 52).

"We designed the study to capture the big picture," said Psychiatry Resident Ram Sharma, M.B.B.S., (PGY-3), lead author on the study. "We expected to see higher rates of alcohol withdrawal during the pandemic, and the data proved us right. Increased vigilance to identify alcohol withdrawal with systematic screening of hospitalized patients will be pivotal as spikes in the pandemic force future stay-at-home orders."

Hospitalized patients suffering from AW can benefit from early intervention and referral-to-treatment programs. Since 2008, ChristianaCare's Project Engage program has served more than 10,000 hospitalized patients, with about 50% connecting to ongoing treatment.

INFORMATION:

About ChristianaCare Headquartered in Wilmington, Delaware, ChristianaCare is one of the country's most dynamic health care organizations, centered on improving health outcomes, making high-quality care more accessible and lowering health care costs. ChristianaCare includes an extensive network of primary care and outpatient services, home health care, urgent care centers, three hospitals (1,299 beds), a free-standing emergency department, a Level I trauma center and a Level III neonatal intensive care unit, a comprehensive stroke center and regional centers of excellence in heart and vascular care, cancer care and women's health. It also includes the pioneering Gene Editing Institute and was rated by IDG Computerworld as one of the nation's Best Places to Work in IT. ChristianaCare is a nonprofit teaching health system with more than 260 residents and fellows. With the unique CareVio data-powered care coordination service and a focus on population health and value-based care, ChristianaCare is shaping the future of health care. Learn how ChristianaCare delivers greater quality and value at https://christianacare.org.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Alcohol withdrawal rates in hospitalized patients during COVID-19 pandemic

2021-03-03
What The Study Did: Whether alcohol withdrawal rates among hospitalized patients with alcohol use disorder increased during the COVID-19 pandemic was examined in this study. Authors: Ram A. Sharma M.D., of Christiana Care in ,Newark, Delaware, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study:  Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.0422) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding/support disclosures. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author ...

Effect of alcohol abstinence incentives with American Indian, Alaska Native adults

2021-03-03
What The Study Did: Researchers in this randomized clinical trial examined the effectiveness of incentives offered for laboratory-confirmed abstinence from alcohol among American Indian and Alaska Native adults diagnosed with alcohol dependence. Authors: Michael G. McDonell, Ph.D., of Washington State University in Spokane, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2020.4768) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding and support disclosures. Please see the article for additional ...

Cardiovascular risk factors, cognitive impairment in people with schizophrenia

2021-03-03
What The Study Did: This study combined the results of 27 studies with 10,000 participants to investigate the association between cardiovascular risk factors such as diabetes and high blood pressure and cognitive impairment in people with schizophrenia. Authors: Christoph U. Correll, M.D., of the Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, New York, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.0015) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest ...

Humans drive most of the ups and downs in freshwater storage at Earth's surface

Humans drive most of the ups and downs in freshwater storage at Earths surface
2021-03-03
Water levels in the world's ponds, lakes and human-managed reservoirs rise and fall from season to season. But until now, it has been difficult to parse out exactly how much of that variation is caused by humans as opposed to natural cycles. Analysis of new satellite data published March 3 in Nature shows fully 57 percent of the seasonal variability in Earth's surface water storage now occurs in dammed reservoirs and other water bodies managed by people. "Humans have a dominant effect on Earth's water cycle," said lead author Sarah Cooley, a postdoctoral scholar ...

New form of symbiosis discovered

New form of symbiosis discovered
2021-03-03
Researchers from Bremen, together with their colleagues from the Max Planck Genome Center in Cologne and the aquatic research institute Eawag from Switzerland, have discovered a unique bacterium that lives inside a unicellular eukaryote and provides it with energy. Unlike mitochondria, this so-called endosymbiont derives energy from the respiration of nitrate, not oxygen. "Such partnership is completely new," says Jana Milucka, the senior author on the Nature. "A symbiosis that is based on respiration and transfer of energy is to this date unprecedented". In general, among eukaryotes, symbioses ...

Tackling tumors with two types of virus

2021-03-03
An international research group led by the University of Basel has developed a promising strategy for therapeutic cancer vaccines. Using two different viruses as vehicles, they administered specific tumor components in experiments on mice with cancer in order to stimulate their immune system to attack the tumor. The approach is now being tested in clinical studies. Making use of the immune system as an ally in the fight against cancer forms the basis of a wide range of modern cancer therapies. One of these is therapeutic cancer vaccination: following diagnosis, specialists set about determining which components of the tumor could function as an identifying feature for the immune system. The patient is then administered ...

Will this solve the mystery of the expansion of the universe?

2021-03-03
The universe was created by a giant bang; the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago, and then it started to expand. The expansion is ongoing: it is still being stretched out in all directions like a balloon being inflated. Physicists agree on this much, but something is wrong. Measuring the expansion rate of the universe in different ways leads to different results. So, is something wrong with the methods of measurement? Or is something going on in the universe that physicists have not yet discovered and therefore have not taken into account? It could very well be the latter, according to several physicists, i.a. Martin S. Sloth, Professor of Cosmology at University of Southern Denmark (SDU). In a new scientific article, he and his SDU ...

New search engine for single cell atlases

2021-03-03
A new software tool allows researchers to quickly query datasets generated from single-cell sequencing. Users can identify which cell types any combination of genes are active in. Published in Nature Methods on 1st March, the open-access 'scfind' software enables swift analysis of multiple datasets containing millions of cells by a wide range of users, on a standard computer. Processing times for such datasets are just a few seconds, saving time and computing costs. The tool, developed by researchers at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, can be used much like a search engine, as users can input free text as well as gene names. Techniques to sequence the genetic material from an individual cell have advanced ...

Reading the physics hiding in data

2021-03-03
Information is encoded in data. This is true for most aspects of modern everyday life, but it is also true in most branches of contemporary physics, and extracting useful and meaningful information from very large data sets is a key mission for many physicists. In statistical mechanics, large data sets are daily business. A classic example is the partition function, a complex mathematical object that describes physical systems at equilibrium. This mathematical object can be seen as made up by many points, each describing a degree of freedom of a physical system, that is, the minimum number of data that can describe all of its properties. An ...

Chemists boost boron's utility

2021-03-03
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Boron, a metalloid element that sits next to carbon in the periodic table, has many traits that make it potentially useful as a drug component. Nonetheless, only five FDA-approved drugs contain boron, largely because molecules that contain boron are unstable in the presence of molecular oxygen. MIT chemists have now designed a boron-containing chemical group that is 10,000 times more stable than its predecessors. This could make it possible to incorporate boron into drugs and potentially improve the drugs' ability to bind their targets, the researchers say. "It's an entity ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Rice statistician earns $1 million CPRIT award to advance AI-powered precision medicine for prostate cancer

Whose air quality are we monitoring?

Team Hope rides (again) for cancer research at the Tour de Scottsdale

Researchers find missing link in autoimmune disorder

‘Democratizing chemical analysis’: FSU chemists use machine learning and robotics to identify chemical compositions from images

Leveraging data science for disease prediction in the fight against rheumatoid arthritis

Kennedy Krieger screening model improves early autism diagnosis for underserved communities

Blood pressure patterns during pregnancy predict later hypertension risk, study finds

Latest Alzheimer’s drug shown less effective in females than males

Moffitt study finds vaccine may improve breast cancer treatment outcomes

Adoption of international auditing standards leads to better financial reporting

Internal displacement in Syria used to reshape the country’s political and social landscape, new study shows

Building a safer future: Rice researcher works to strengthen Haiti’s earthquake resilience

Diverging views of democracy fuel support for authoritarian politicians, Notre Dame study shows

Bacteria invade brain after implanting medical devices

New platform lets anyone rapidly prototype large, sturdy interactive structures

Non-genetic theories of cancer address inconsistencies in current paradigm

Food and non-alcoholic drink products in Mexico were substantially reformulated to be healthier following the 2020 introduction of warning labels identifying products with excessive content of calorie

Conservation efforts are bringing species back from the brink, even as overall biodiversity falls

Conservation efforts analysis reveals which actions are most helpful for endangered species status

JSCAI special issue explores the transformative role of artificial intelligence in interventional cardiology

Wayne State University research making strides in autonomous vehicle and machine systems to make them safer, more effective

Thorny skates come in snack and party sizes. After a century of guessing, scientists now know why.

When did human language emerge?

Meteorites: A geologic map of the asteroid belt

Study confirms safety and efficacy of higher-dose-per-day radiation for early-stage prostate cancer

Virginia Tech researchers publish revolutionary blueprint to fuse wireless technologies and AI

Illinois study: Extreme heat impacts dairy production, small farms most vulnerable

Continuous glucose monitors can optimize diabetic ketoacidosis management

Time is not the driving influence of forest carbon storage, U-M study finds

[Press-News.org] Study: Alcohol withdrawal rates among hospitalized patients rose 34% during COVID pandemic
First study to quantify impact of COVID-19 pandemic on alcohol withdrawal among hospitalized patients