School of Medicine, University College Cork, Cork City, Cork, Ireland
School of Medicine, University College Cork, Cork City, Cork, Ireland.
Emerg Med J. 2021 Jun;38(6):439-445. doi: 10.1136/emermed-2020-209992. Epub 2021 Apr 13.
COVID-19 has resulted in the death of over 1 million people to date. Following government-implemented regulations, there has been concern over the apparent decline in emergency department (ED) attendances and the resultant health legacy. Therefore, we aimed to characterise the attendances to an Irish tertiary hospital ED following the implementation of these regulations during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This retrospective observational study investigated all attendances to the Cork University Hospital ED from 15 February to 11 April in 2020 and 2017-2019. Attendances were stratified into four periods: Before COVID (BC) (15 February to 5 March), After COVID (AC) (6 March to 12 March), Educational Closure (EC) (13 March to 27 March) and Stay Home (SH) (28 March to 11 April), as per government regulations. Triage presentations of abdominal pain, shortness of breath, chest pain, headache and trauma were examined. Data were analysed by independent t-tests and χ analysis.
There were 8261 attendances to the ED in the 2020 time period compared with a mean of 10 389 attendances during the corresponding periods in 2017-2019. There was a significant decrease in daily attendances in 2020 compared with 2017-2019 in the AC (142 vs 188, p=0.02), EC (122 vs 184, p<0.001) and SH (121 vs 181, p<0.001) periods, including significant decreases in abdominal pain (AC: 9 vs 22, EC: 10 vs 19, SH: 11 vs 18, p<0.001), chest pain (AC: 9 vs 15, EC: 8 vs 15, SH: 9 vs 15, p<0.01), headache (AC: 5 vs 11, EC: 4 vs 9, SH: 4 vs 9, p<0.01) and trauma (AC: 3 vs 5, EC: 2 vs 6, SH: 3 vs 5, p<0.01.
Our findings suggest that the combination of government-imposed restrictions and perceived risk of attending an ED during a pandemic may contribute to reduced attendances. Public confidence in EDs is necessary to reduce collateral damage caused by failure to seek medical attention during a pandemic; adequate infrastructure to allow social distancing and isolation capacity in EDs is a necessity.
COVID-19 已导致超过 100 万人死亡。在政府实施的规定之后,人们对急诊部(ED)就诊人数的明显下降以及由此产生的健康遗留问题表示担忧。因此,我们旨在描述在 COVID-19 大流行期间实施这些规定后,爱尔兰一家三级医院 ED 的就诊情况。
这项回顾性观察研究调查了 2020 年 2 月 15 日至 4 月 11 日和 2017-2019 年期间科克大学医院 ED 的所有就诊情况。就诊情况分为四个时期:COVID 前(BC)(2 月 15 日至 3 月 5 日)、COVID 后(AC)(3 月 6 日至 3 月 12 日)、教育关闭(EC)(3 月 13 日至 3 月 27 日)和居家(SH)(3 月 28 日至 4 月 11 日),这是根据政府规定进行的。检查了腹痛、呼吸急促、胸痛、头痛和创伤的分诊表现。数据通过独立 t 检验和 χ 分析进行分析。
与 2017-2019 年同期相比,2020 年 ED 就诊人数为 8261 人,平均为 10389 人。与 2017-2019 年相比,2020 年 AC(142 对 188,p=0.02)、EC(122 对 184,p<0.001)和 SH(121 对 181,p<0.001)期间的每日就诊人数均显著减少,包括腹痛(AC:9 对 22,EC:10 对 19,SH:11 对 18,p<0.001)、胸痛(AC:9 对 15,EC:8 对 15,SH:9 对 15,p<0.01)、头痛(AC:5 对 11,EC:4 对 9,SH:4 对 9,p<0.01)和创伤(AC:3 对 5,EC:2 对 6,SH:3 对 5,p<0.01)显著减少。
我们的研究结果表明,政府实施的限制措施和在大流行期间对急诊部就诊的感知风险可能导致就诊人数减少。公众对急诊室的信心对于减少大流行期间因未能寻求医疗救治而造成的附带损害是必要的;急诊室需要足够的基础设施来允许社会隔离和隔离能力。