Kruizinga Matthijs D, Peeters Daphne, van Veen Mirjam, van Houten Marlies, Wieringa Jantien, Noordzij Jeroen G, Bekhof Jolita, Tramper-Stranders Gerdien, Vet Nienke J, Driessen Gertjan J A
Juliana Children's Hospital (Haga Teaching hospital), Els Borst-Eilersplein 275, 2545 AA, The Hague, the Netherlands.
Centre for Human Drug Research, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Eur J Pediatr. 2021 Jul;180(7):2271-2279. doi: 10.1007/s00431-021-04015-0. Epub 2021 Mar 15.
The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has enormous impact on society and healthcare. Countries imposed lockdowns, which were followed by a reduction in care utilization. The aims of this study were to quantify the effects of lockdown on pediatric care in the Netherlands, to elucidate the cause of the observed reduction in pediatric emergency department (ED) visits and hospital admissions, and to summarize the literature regarding the effects of lockdown on pediatric care worldwide. ED visits and hospital admission data of 8 general hospitals in the Netherlands between January 2016 and June 2020 were summarized per diagnosis group (communicable infections, noncommunicable infections, (probable) infection-related, and noninfectious). The effects of lockdown were quantified with a linear mixed effects model. A literature review regarding the effect of lockdowns on pediatric clinical care was performed. In total, 126,198 ED visits and 47,648 admissions were registered in the study period. The estimated reduction in general pediatric care was 59% and 56% for ED visits and admissions, respectively. The largest reduction was observed for communicable infections (ED visits: 76%; admissions: 77%), whereas the reduction in noninfectious diagnoses was smaller (ED visits 36%; admissions: 37%). Similar reductions were reported worldwide, with decreases of 30-89% for ED visits and 19-73% for admissions.Conclusion: Pediatric ED utilization and hospitalization during lockdown were decreased in the Netherlands and other countries, which can largely be attributed to a decrease in communicable infectious diseases. Care utilization for other conditions was decreased as well, which may indicate that care avoidance during a pandemic is significant. What is Known: • The COVID-19 pandemic had enormous impact on society. • Countries imposed lockdowns to curb transmission rates, which were followed by a reduction in care utilization worldwide. What is New: • The Dutch lockdown caused a significant decrease in pediatric ED utilization and hospitalization, especially in ED visits and hospital admissions because of infections that were not caused by SARS-CoV-2. • Care utilization for noninfectious diagnoses was decreased as well, which may indicate that pediatric care avoidance during a pandemic is significant.
2019年冠状病毒病大流行对社会和医疗保健产生了巨大影响。各国实施了封锁措施,随后医疗服务利用率下降。本研究的目的是量化荷兰封锁措施对儿科医疗的影响,阐明观察到的儿科急诊科(ED)就诊和住院人数减少的原因,并总结关于全球封锁措施对儿科医疗影响的文献。汇总了2016年1月至2020年6月期间荷兰8家综合医院按诊断组(传染病、非传染病、(可能)感染相关和非感染性疾病)分类的ED就诊和住院数据。采用线性混合效应模型量化封锁措施的影响。进行了关于封锁措施对儿科临床医疗影响的文献综述。在研究期间共记录了126,198次ED就诊和47,648次住院。估计儿科普通医疗服务中ED就诊和住院人数分别减少了59%和56%。传染病方面的减少幅度最大(ED就诊:76%;住院:77%),而非感染性诊断的减少幅度较小(ED就诊:36%;住院:37%)。全球范围内也报告了类似的减少情况,ED就诊减少30 - 89%,住院减少19 - 73%。结论:在荷兰和其他国家,封锁期间儿科ED利用率和住院率下降,这在很大程度上可归因于传染病的减少。其他病症的医疗服务利用率也有所下降,这可能表明在大流行期间避免就医的情况很显著。已知信息:• 新冠疫情对社会产生了巨大影响。• 各国实施封锁以控制传播率,随后全球医疗服务利用率下降。新发现:• 荷兰的封锁导致儿科ED利用率和住院率显著下降,尤其是因非SARS-CoV-2感染导致的ED就诊和住院人数。• 非感染性诊断的医疗服务利用率也有所下降,这可能表明在大流行期间儿科避免就医的情况很显著。