Department of Anaesthesia/Pain and Palliative Care Unit, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria Ituku-Ozalla Campus, Enugu, Enugu State, Nigeria.
Center for Translation and Implementation Research, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria, Ituku-Ozalla Campus, Enugu, Enugu State, Nigeria.
Pan Afr Med J. 2022 May 10;42:22. doi: 10.11604/pamj.2022.42.22.34249. eCollection 2022.
the coronavirus pandemic and associated lockdowns restricted movement with non-essential hospital trips discouraged to prevent spread of the virus. Disruption of medical services can lead to increased seeking of medical advice and symptom management online. With COVID-19 known to worsen existing cardiovascular disease or precipitate a new one, we sought to explore online search trends of the Nigerian public regarding cardiac events before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
using Google Trends™, relative search volume for the terms 'cardiac arrest', 'heart attack', and 'heart arrest' were analyzed for the periods 27 February to 30 September in 2019 and 2020 respectively. Descriptive statistics, Mann-Whitney U test for relative search volume, search terms comparison in both years and Kendall´s correlation coefficient for examining relationships between time frames and search terms were used.
searches for terms 'heart attack' (p<0.001) and 'heart arrest' (p=0.01) were higher in 2020 compared to 2019, with a correlation between searches for 'cardiac arrest' and 'heart arrest' (p<0.001) and between 'heart attack' and 'heart arrest' (p=0.01). There was a strong positive correlation between search for 'heart attack' in 2019 and 2020 (tau b=0.35, p<0.001); and a moderate positive correlation for 'heart arrest' (tau b=0.13, p=0.01).
increased online activity relating to cardiac arrest was recorded during the early months of the pandemic when compared to the year prior. Notable increases in search activity aligned with the timing of heart-related illnesses and deaths of Nigerian celebrities during the pandemic. Further understanding of health-related online search activity in Nigeria could inform the development of health promotion interventions and support health-related information seeking for cardiovascular diseases.
冠状病毒大流行和相关的封锁限制了非必要的医院旅行,以防止病毒传播。医疗服务的中断可能导致更多的人在线寻求医疗建议和症状管理。由于已知 COVID-19 会使现有心血管疾病恶化或引发新的心血管疾病,我们试图探讨尼日利亚公众在 COVID-19 大流行前后对心脏事件的在线搜索趋势。
使用 Google Trends™,分析了 2019 年 2 月 27 日至 9 月 30 日和 2020 年同期“心搏骤停”、“心脏病发作”和“心脏骤停”这三个术语的相对搜索量。使用描述性统计、相对搜索量的曼-惠特尼 U 检验、两年间搜索词的比较以及肯德尔相关系数来检验时间框架和搜索词之间的关系。
与 2019 年相比,2020 年“心脏病发作”(p<0.001)和“心脏骤停”(p=0.01)的搜索量更高,“心搏骤停”和“心脏骤停”(p<0.001)以及“心脏病发作”和“心脏骤停”(p=0.01)之间存在相关性。2019 年和 2020 年“心脏病发作”的搜索量之间存在很强的正相关(tau b=0.35,p<0.001);“心脏骤停”的搜索量之间存在中度正相关(tau b=0.13,p=0.01)。
与前一年相比,大流行早期的心脏骤停相关在线活动记录有所增加。搜索活动的显著增加与大流行期间与心脏相关的尼日利亚名人患病和死亡的时间相吻合。进一步了解尼日利亚与健康相关的在线搜索活动,可以为制定健康促进干预措施和支持心血管疾病相关信息查询提供信息。