Usher Institute, Edinburgh Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH16 4UX UK.
MRC/CSO Social & Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow G3 7HR, Glasgow, UK.
J R Soc Med. 2022 Nov;115(11):429-438. doi: 10.1177/01410768221095239. Epub 2022 May 3.
COVID-19 has resulted in the greatest disruption to National Health Service (NHS) care in its over 70-year history. Building on our previous work, we assessed the ongoing impact of pandemic-related disruption on provision of emergency and elective hospital-based care across Scotland over the first year of the pandemic.
We undertook interrupted time-series analyses to evaluate the impact of ongoing pandemic-related disruption on hospital NHS care provision at national level and across demographics and clinical specialties spanning the period 29 March 2020-28 March 2021.
Scotland, UK.
Patients receiving hospital care from NHS Scotland.
We used the percentage change of accident and emergency attendances, and emergency and planned hospital admissions during the pandemic compared to the average admission rate for equivalent weeks in 2018-2019.
As restrictions were gradually lifted in Scotland after the first lockdown, hospital-based admissions increased approaching pre-pandemic levels. Subsequent tightening of restrictions in September 2020 were associated with a change in slope of relative weekly admissions rate: -1.98% (-2.38, -1.58) in accident and emergency attendance, -1.36% (-1.68, -1.04) in emergency admissions and -2.31% (-2.95, -1.66) in planned admissions. A similar pattern was seen across sex, socioeconomic status and most age groups, except children (0-14 years) where accident and emergency attendance, and emergency admissions were persistently low over the study period.
We found substantial disruption to urgent and planned inpatient healthcare provision in hospitals across NHS Scotland. There is the need for urgent policy responses to address continuing unmet health needs and to ensure resilience in the context of future pandemics.
COVID-19 对国民保健服务(NHS)的护理造成了 70 多年来最大的破坏。基于我们之前的工作,我们评估了大流行相关中断对苏格兰大流行第一年期间紧急和选择性基于医院的护理提供的持续影响。
我们进行了中断时间序列分析,以评估在全国范围内以及跨越人口统计学和临床专业的 NHS 医院护理提供方面,持续大流行相关中断的影响,时间跨度为 2020 年 3 月 29 日至 2021 年 3 月 28 日。
苏格兰,英国。
从苏格兰 NHS 接受医院护理的患者。
我们使用大流行期间与 2018-2019 年同期平均入院率相比,急诊就诊和紧急及计划入院的百分比变化来衡量。
随着苏格兰在第一次封锁后逐步放宽限制,医院收治的人数逐渐接近大流行前的水平。2020 年 9 月再次收紧限制与相对每周入院率斜率的变化有关:急诊就诊 -1.98%(-2.38,-1.58),紧急入院 -1.36%(-1.68,-1.04),计划入院 -2.31%(-2.95,-1.66)。在性别、社会经济地位和大多数年龄组中都观察到了类似的模式,但在研究期间,儿童(0-14 岁)的急诊就诊和紧急入院率一直较低。
我们发现苏格兰 NHS 各医院的紧急和计划住院医疗服务提供受到了严重干扰。需要紧急政策应对措施来解决持续存在的未满足的健康需求,并确保在未来大流行的背景下保持弹性。