ISSN: 2639-2038
Authors: Ontai S*, Zeng L, Choi D, Sierra Hoffman M, Valerio Pascua F, VanBuren V and McCullough PA
Introduction: Within 2 months of first detection of SARS-CoV-2 in Honduras, its government promoted nationwide implementation of multidrug COVID-19 inpatient and outpatient protocols. This was associated with a case fatality rate decrease from 9.33% to 2.97%. No decrease was seen in Mexico, a similar Latin-American country that did not introduce multidrug treatment protocols at that time. Objective: The primary objective of the study was to use statistical process control to assess the likelihood that the decrease in case fatality rate in Honduras was due to chance, using Mexico as a control country. Methods: Fourteen day running average COVID-19 case fatality rates in Mexico and Honduras were used to create Shewhart control charts during the first 6 months of the epidemic. The date of implementation in Honduras of the inpatient and outpatient multidrug COVID-19 protocols were plotted on control charts, with a Mexican COVID-19 case fatality control chart as a comparison. Results: The case fatality rate for COVID-19 in Honduras dropped below the lower control limit 9 days after implementation of an inpatient multidrug inpatient protocol, from an average 9.33% case fatality rate to 5.01%. The Honduran COVID-19 case fatality rate again dropped below the 5.01% control chart limit 17 days after implementation of an outpatient multidrug protocol, to an average 2.97%, suggesting statistically significant anomalies. No control limit anomalies were seen during the same period in neighbouring Mexico. Conclusion: There was an association between both inpatient and outpatient multidrug treatment of COVID-19 and decreased fatality rates in Honduras.
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS CoV-2 infections; Honduras