Evidence-Based Reviews

COVID-19 and patients with serious mental illness

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While not as infectious as measles, COVID-19 is more infectious than the seasonal flu virus.17 It can lead to uncontrolled infection within a short period of time, particularly in enclosed settings. Outbreaks have occurred readily on cruise ships and aircraft carriers as well as in nursing homes, homeless shelters, prisons, and group homes.

Patients with SMI are vulnerable hosts because they have many of the medical risk factors18 that portend a poor prognosis if they become infected, including pre-existing lung conditions and heart disease19 as well as diabetes and obesity.20 Obesity likely creates a hyperinflammatory state and a decrease in vital capacity. Patient-related behavioral factors include poor early-symptom reporting and ineffective infection control.

Unfavorable social determinants of health include not only poverty but crowded housing that is a perfect incubator for COVID-19.

Priority treatment goals. The overarching goal during a pandemic is to keep patients with SMI in psychiatric treatment and prevent them from disengaging from care in the service of infection control. Urgent tasks include infection control, relapse prevention, and preventing treatment disengagement and loneliness.

Infection control. As trusted sources of information, psychiatrists can play an important role in infection control in several important ways:

  • educating patients about infection-control measures and public-health recommendations
  • helping patients understand what testing can accomplish and when to pursue it
  • encouraging protective health behaviors (eg, hand washing, mask wearing, physical distancing)
  • assessing patients’ risk appreciation
  • assessing for and addressing obstacles to implementing and complying with infection-control measures
  • explaining contact tracing
  • providing reassurance.

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