Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Lancet Digit Health. 2021 Apr;3(4):e217-e230. doi: 10.1016/S2589-7500(21)00017-0. Epub 2021 Feb 18.
There are concerns that the response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK might have worsened physical and mental health, and reduced use of health services. However, the scale of the problem is unquantified, impeding development of effective mitigations. We aimed to ascertain what has happened to general practice contacts for acute physical and mental health outcomes during the pandemic.
Using de-identified electronic health records from the Clinical Research Practice Datalink (CPRD) Aurum (covering 13% of the UK population), between 2017 and 2020, we calculated weekly primary care contacts for selected acute physical and mental health conditions: anxiety, depression, self-harm (fatal and non-fatal), severe mental illness, eating disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, acute alcohol-related events, asthma exacerbation, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbation, acute cardiovascular events (cerebrovascular accident, heart failure, myocardial infarction, transient ischaemic attacks, unstable angina, and venous thromboembolism), and diabetic emergency. Primary care contacts included remote and face-to-face consultations, diagnoses from hospital discharge letters, and secondary care referrals, and conditions were identified through primary care records for diagnoses, symptoms, and prescribing. Our overall study population included individuals aged 11 years or older who had at least 1 year of registration with practices contributing to CPRD Aurum in the specified period, but denominator populations varied depending on the condition being analysed. We used an interrupted time-series analysis to formally quantify changes in conditions after the introduction of population-wide restrictions (defined as March 29, 2020) compared with the period before their introduction (defined as Jan 1, 2017 to March 7, 2020), with data excluded for an adjustment-to-restrictions period (March 8-28).
The overall population included 9 863 903 individuals on Jan 1, 2017, and increased to 10 226 939 by Jan 1, 2020. Primary care contacts for almost all conditions dropped considerably after the introduction of population-wide restrictions. The largest reductions were observed for contacts for diabetic emergencies (odds ratio 0·35 [95% CI 0·25-0·50]), depression (0·53 [0·52-0·53]), and self-harm (0·56 [0·54-0·58]). In the interrupted time-series analysis, with the exception of acute alcohol-related events (0·98 [0·89-1·10]), there was evidence of a reduction in contacts for all conditions (anxiety 0·67 [0·66-0·67], eating disorders 0·62 [0·59-0·66], obsessive-compulsive disorder [0·69 [0·64-0·74]], self-harm 0·56 [0·54-0·58], severe mental illness 0·80 [0·78-0·83], stroke 0·59 [0·56-0·62], transient ischaemic attack 0·63 [0·58-0·67], heart failure 0·62 [0·60-0·64], myocardial infarction 0·72 [0·68-0·77], unstable angina 0·72 [0·60-0·87], venous thromboembolism 0·94 [0·90-0·99], and asthma exacerbation 0·88 [0·86-0·90]). By July, 2020, except for unstable angina and acute alcohol-related events, contacts for all conditions had not recovered to pre-lockdown levels.
There were substantial reductions in primary care contacts for acute physical and mental conditions following the introduction of restrictions, with limited recovery by July, 2020. Further research is needed to ascertain whether these reductions reflect changes in disease frequency or missed opportunities for care. Maintaining health-care access should be a key priority in future public health planning, including further restrictions. The conditions we studied are sufficiently severe that any unmet need will have substantial ramifications for the people with the conditions as well as health-care provision.
Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowship, Health Data Research UK.
人们担心英国对 COVID-19 大流行的应对措施可能会恶化身心健康,并减少对卫生服务的使用。然而,问题的严重程度尚未量化,这阻碍了有效缓解措施的制定。我们旨在确定在大流行期间,普通科医生对急性身心健康结果的就诊情况发生了什么变化。
利用临床研究实践数据链接(CPRD)Aurum 的去识别电子健康记录(覆盖英国人口的 13%),我们计算了 2017 年至 2020 年期间选定的急性身心健康状况(焦虑、抑郁、自残(致命和非致命)、严重精神疾病、饮食失调、强迫症、急性酒精相关事件、哮喘加重、慢性阻塞性肺疾病加重、急性心血管事件(中风、心力衰竭、心肌梗死、短暂性脑缺血发作、不稳定型心绞痛和静脉血栓栓塞)和糖尿病急症)的初级保健接触情况。初级保健接触包括远程和面对面咨询、医院出院信中的诊断以及二级保健转诊,通过初级保健记录来确定诊断、症状和处方来识别疾病。我们的总体研究人群包括至少有 1 年在参与 CPRD Aurum 的实践注册的年龄为 11 岁或以上的个体,但根据正在分析的情况,分母人群有所不同。我们使用中断时间序列分析来正式量化在引入全人群限制(定义为 2020 年 3 月 29 日)后与引入前(定义为 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 3 月 7 日)相比疾病状况的变化,在调整限制期间(3 月 8 日至 28 日)排除数据。
2017 年 1 月 1 日的总体人群包括 9863903 人,到 2020 年 1 月 1 日增加到 10226939 人。在引入全人群限制后,几乎所有疾病的初级保健接触量都大幅下降。观察到的最大降幅是糖尿病急症(比值比 0.35[95%CI 0.25-0.50])、抑郁(0.53[0.52-0.53])和自残(0.56[0.54-0.58])。在中断时间序列分析中,除了急性酒精相关事件(0.98[0.89-1.10])外,所有疾病的接触量均有下降的证据(焦虑症 0.67[0.66-0.67]、饮食失调症 0.62[0.59-0.66]、强迫症 0.69[0.64-0.74]、自残 0.56[0.54-0.58]、严重精神疾病 0.80[0.78-0.83]、中风 0.59[0.56-0.62]、短暂性脑缺血发作 0.63[0.58-0.67]、心力衰竭 0.62[0.60-0.64]、心肌梗死 0.72[0.68-0.77]、不稳定型心绞痛 0.72[0.60-0.87]、静脉血栓栓塞症 0.94[0.90-0.99]和哮喘加重 0.88[0.86-0.90])。到 2020 年 7 月,除了不稳定型心绞痛和急性酒精相关事件外,所有疾病的接触量都没有恢复到锁定前的水平。
在限制措施实施后,急性身心疾病的初级保健接触量大幅减少,到 2020 年 7 月,接触量尚未恢复。需要进一步研究以确定这些减少是否反映了疾病频率的变化还是错过了护理机会。维护医疗保健获取应该是未来公共卫生规划的一个关键优先事项,包括进一步的限制。我们研究的疾病都足够严重,任何未满足的需求都将对患者以及医疗保健提供产生重大影响。
惠康信托基金会高级研究员、英国健康数据研究中心。