Department of Urology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
BMC Urol. 2022 Jun 15;22(1):83. doi: 10.1186/s12894-022-01041-4.
The mean number of emergency department visits for all-cause traumas has declined significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic. We aim to identify how a global pandemic and social distancing could affect the trends and pattern of genitourinary traumas.
We queried the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System to obtain consumer product-related genitourinary injuries leading to emergency department visits. Using three key events in 2020, we divided the study period to three intervals: January 20, when the first COVID-19 case was confirmed in the United States; March 13, when a national state of emergency was declared; April 20, when Texas became the first state to start a phased reopening of economy. We compared the injury characteristics in 2020 to their identical intervals in 2019.
Daily emergency department visits dropped significantly during the national lockdown (mean 131.5 vs. 78; Δ-40.7%; p < 0.01). The genitourinary injuries decreased significantly in children ≤ 17 years (p < 0.01), males (p < 0.001), and White population (p < 0.01). However, it did not change significantly in adults 18-64 years (p = 0.92), old adults ≥ 65 years (p = 0.37), females (p = 0.60), Black population (p = 0.90), other/unknown races (p = 0.93), and for injuries sustained at home (p = 0.75) and public (p = 0.11) locations. During the lockdown period, injuries associated with toilets/toilet seats (- 320, - 74.6%), day wear (- 266, - 77.7%), beds/bedframes (- 209, - 64.2%) decreased while injuries associated with knickknacks/statues/vases (+ 154, n/a), sofas/couches/divans (+ 130, 2,684%), and razors/shavers (+ 99, n/a) increased.
The COVID-19 lockdown had a significant impact on genitourinary traumas. The contributing factors could be investigated further to prevent such injuries during deconfinement periods.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,因所有原因导致的创伤而到急诊科就诊的平均人数显著下降。我们旨在确定全球大流行和社会隔离如何影响泌尿生殖系统创伤的趋势和模式。
我们查询了国家电子伤害监测系统,以获取导致急诊科就诊的与消费品相关的泌尿生殖系统损伤。使用 2020 年的三个关键事件,我们将研究期间分为三个时间段:美国首次确诊 COVID-19 病例的 2020 年 1 月 20 日;宣布全国进入紧急状态的 2020 年 3 月 13 日;德克萨斯州成为第一个开始分阶段重新开放经济的州的 2020 年 4 月 20 日。我们将 2020 年的伤害特征与 2019 年相同时间段的特征进行了比较。
全国封锁期间,急诊科就诊人数明显下降(平均每天 131.5 人,平均每天 78 人,下降 40.7%;p<0.01)。儿童≤17 岁(p<0.01)、男性(p<0.001)和白人人口(p<0.01)的泌尿生殖系统损伤明显减少。然而,18-64 岁成年人(p=0.92)、≥65 岁老年人(p=0.37)、女性(p=0.60)、黑人(p=0.90)、其他/未知种族(p=0.93)和受伤在家(p=0.75)和公共场所(p=0.11)的受伤情况变化不明显。在封锁期间,与马桶/马桶座圈(-320,-74.6%)、日常穿戴(-266,-77.7%)和床/床架(-209,-64.2%)相关的损伤减少,而与小摆设/雕像/花瓶(+154,无/NA)、沙发/沙发/长沙发(+130,2,684%)和剃须刀/电动剃须刀(+99,无/NA)相关的损伤增加。
COVID-19 封锁对泌尿生殖系统创伤产生了重大影响。可以进一步调查促成因素,以防止在解除隔离期间发生此类伤害。