Department of Acute General Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Headley Way, OX3 9DU, Oxford, UK.
Emergency Medicine Research Oxford (EMROx), John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Headley Way, Oxford, OX3 9DU, UK.
BMC Emerg Med. 2021 Nov 20;21(1):143. doi: 10.1186/s12873-021-00529-w.
To better understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on hospital healthcare, we studied activity in the emergency department (ED) and acute medicine department of a major UK hospital.
Electronic patient records for all adult patients attending ED (n = 243,667) or acute medicine (n = 82,899) during the pandemic (2020-2021) and prior year (2019) were analysed and compared. We studied parameters including severity, primary diagnoses, co-morbidity, admission rate, length of stay, bed occupancy, and mortality, with a focus on non-COVID-19 diseases.
During the first wave of the pandemic, daily ED attendance fell by 37%, medical admissions by 30% and medical bed occupancy by 27%, but all returned to normal within a year. ED attendances and medical admissions fell across all age ranges; the greatest reductions were seen for younger adults in ED attendances, but in older adults for medical admissions. Compared to non-COVID-19 pandemic admissions, COVID-19 admissions were enriched for minority ethnic groups, for dementia, obesity and diabetes, but had lower rates of malignancy. Compared to the pre-pandemic period, non-COVID-19 pandemic admissions had more hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, liver disease, and obesity. There were fewer low severity ED attendances during the pandemic and fewer medical admissions across all severity categories. There were fewer ED attendances with common non-respiratory illnesses including cardiac diagnoses, but no change in cardiac arrests. COVID-19 was the commonest diagnosis amongst medical admissions during the first wave and there were fewer diagnoses of pneumonia, myocardial infarction, heart failure, cellulitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, urinary tract infection and other sepsis, but not stroke. Levels had rebounded by a year later with a trend to higher levels of stroke than before the pandemic. During the pandemic first wave, 7-day mortality was increased for ED attendances, but not for non-COVID-19 medical admissions.
Reduced ED attendances in the first wave of the pandemic suggest opportunities for reducing low severity presentations to ED in the future, but also raise the possibility of harm from delayed or missed care. Reassuringly, recent rises in attendance and admissions indicate that any deterrent effect of the pandemic on attendance is diminishing.
为了更好地了解 COVID-19 大流行对医院医疗保健的影响,我们研究了英国一家主要医院急诊科 (ED) 和急性医学科的活动。
分析比较了大流行期间(2020-2021 年)和前一年(2019 年)所有在急诊科就诊的成年患者(n=243667)或在急性医学科就诊的成年患者(n=82899)的电子病历。我们研究了包括严重程度、主要诊断、合并症、入院率、住院时间、床位占用率和死亡率等参数,重点关注非 COVID-19 疾病。
在大流行的第一波期间,每日急诊科就诊人数下降了 37%,内科入院人数下降了 30%,内科床位占用率下降了 27%,但所有这些指标均在一年内恢复正常。急诊科就诊人数和内科入院人数均在所有年龄段下降;在急诊科就诊人数中,年轻人的降幅最大,而在老年人群中,内科入院人数降幅最大。与非 COVID-19 大流行入院相比,COVID-19 入院患者中少数民族、痴呆症、肥胖症和糖尿病患者更多,但恶性肿瘤患者较少。与大流行前相比,非 COVID-19 大流行入院患者中有更多的高血压、脑血管疾病、肝病和肥胖症。大流行期间,急诊科就诊患者中低严重程度患者减少,所有严重程度类别的内科入院人数减少。包括心脏病诊断在内的常见非呼吸道疾病的急诊科就诊人数减少,但心脏骤停没有变化。COVID-19 是第一波期间内科入院的最常见诊断,肺炎、心肌梗死、心力衰竭、蜂窝织炎、慢性阻塞性肺疾病、尿路感染和其他败血症的诊断减少,但中风没有减少。一年后,这些水平有所反弹,中风的水平呈上升趋势,高于大流行前。在大流行的第一波期间,急诊科就诊患者的 7 天死亡率增加,但非 COVID-19 内科入院患者的死亡率没有增加。
大流行第一波期间急诊科就诊人数减少表明,未来有可能减少急诊科低严重程度就诊,但也有可能因延误或错过治疗而造成伤害。令人欣慰的是,最近就诊人数和入院人数的上升表明,大流行对就诊人数的任何抑制作用正在减弱。