Corona patients in the second wave are becoming less ill, say Dutch internists

Dutch coronavirus patients are now becoming less ill than patients in the first wave, according to new research from the Nederlandse Internisten Vereniging (NIV) (Dutch Internists Association). 

The study compared the health of 90 patients treated in March and April with a group of a further 90 patients treated two weeks ago.

Significantly, the number of patients transferred to the ICU has now been halved. Equally significant, the average hospital stay has been reduced by one third. Patients in the ICU in March and April were admitted for an average of 22 days. In May and June, this had been reduced to 16.

The results are in line with a report from the Dutch Association for Intensive Care (NVIC) who also previously reported stays in intensive care units have been reduced.

Still ill, but not as serious

The research comes as coronavirus infections mount, forcing the Dutch government to implement new measures as of yesterday evening.

NIV director Samara de Jong-Jaber told NU.nl that part of the improvement is more knowledge about treatment methods. “In the beginning everyone was searching,” she says. She emphasises that patients can still become seriously ill.

However, De Jong-Jaber says that the data does match the general feeling in hospitals. “We have been seeing for some time that there is a difference between the first and second wave,” she says. “This is a first official observation, which offers room for further research.”

Hospitals scramble to prepare

But hospitals aren’t out of the woods yet. The NIV says that despite less patients heading to the ICU, regular wards are filling up faster. The Dutch health system remains under pressure.

Follow DutchReview on Facebook for more information about coronavirus in the Netherlands.

Feature Image: ©JazzIRT/Canva.com

Samantha Dixon 🇦🇺
Samantha Dixon 🇦🇺https://gallivantations.com
Sam has over six years experience writing about life in the Netherlands and leads the content team at DutchReview. She originally came to the Netherlands to study in 2016 and now holds a BA (Hons.) in Arts, a BA (Hons) in Journalism, and (almost) a Masters in Teaching. She loves to write about settling into life in the Netherlands, her city of Utrecht, learning Dutch, and jobs in the Netherlands — and she still can’t jump on the back of a moving bike (she's learning!).

1 COMMENT

Leave a Reply to Vfhjcf Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related posts

Latest posts

Is smoking weed in Amsterdam legal? (+ 7 best coffeeshops!)

You’ve arrived in Amsterdam, you’re ready to hit the coffeeshops, but wait: Is smoking weed in Amsterdam legal? You’re not the first to ask this...

Queen Máxima of the Netherlands: how an Argentinian became a Dutch royal

Queen Máxima is both the first non-European and the first “commoner” to join the Dutch Royal Family. But who is Queen Maxima, and how...

Dutch Quirk #20: Be overwhelmingly stingy

The Netherlands is famously a well-organised, well-developed, and economically thriving country, so why are they also known for being so overwhelmingly stingy? The Dutch respect...

It's happening

Upcoming events

The latest Dutch news.
In your inbox.