School of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY, 10595, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Psychiatr Q. 2022 Sep;93(3):935-946. doi: 10.1007/s11126-022-09999-y. Epub 2022 Aug 31.
Despite an overall decrease in utilization of emergency departments during COVID-19 (Hartnett et al. in MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 69(23):699-704, 2020), US pediatric emergency departments experienced an increase in mental health visits for children and adolescents (Leeb et al. in MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 69(45):1675-80, 2020). Simultaneously, individuals with eating disorders reported increasing symptomology (Termorshuizen et al. in Int J Eat Disord. 53(11):1780-90, 2020). This study compares Emergency Department utilization at a pediatric quaternary-level care center by patients with eating disorders during the pandemic (March-Dec 2020) vs March-Dec 2019. We hypothesize that there was an increase in presentation of patients with eating disorders. An Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside query of the electronic medical record system identified patients with eating disorder diagnoses per ICD9/ICD10 codes aged 6-23 who presented to the Emergency Department between March 1 and December 31 of 2020 and 2019. Subsequent retrospective chart review was carried out. Patients were excluded from analysis if the presenting problem was not directly related to the eating disorder. During March-Dec 2019, 0.581% percent of all patients presented to the Emergency Department due to an eating disorder. During the same time frame in 2020, however, that percentage increased to 1.265%. Statistical significance was corrected using a Benjamini-Hochberg analysis. Despite a 66.5% decline in overall visits to the Emergency Department, the percentage of patients presenting with eating disorders doubled during the pandemic. During the pandemic, the total time spent awaiting placement significantly increased, and the number of patients identifying as transgender and/or nonbinary increased. Our data support the hypothesis that eating disorder presentation increased during the pandemic.
尽管在 COVID-19 期间,美国急诊部门的整体利用率有所下降(Hartnett 等人在《发病率和死亡率周报》69(23):699-704,2020),但美国儿科急诊部门接待的儿童和青少年心理健康就诊人数有所增加(Leeb 等人在《发病率和死亡率周报》69(45):1675-80,2020)。同时,饮食失调患者报告的症状也在增加(Termorshuizen 等人在《国际饮食失调杂志》53(11):1780-90,2020)。本研究比较了大流行期间(2020 年 3 月至 12 月)和 2019 年同期,一家儿科四级护理中心的急诊部门中饮食失调患者的就诊情况。我们假设就诊的饮食失调患者有所增加。通过电子病历系统的 Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside 查询,根据 ICD9/ICD10 代码确定了年龄在 6-23 岁之间、2020 年 3 月 1 日至 12 月 31 日期间和 2019 年同期因饮食失调到急诊就诊的患者。随后进行了回顾性图表审查。如果就诊的主要问题与饮食失调无关,则将患者排除在分析之外。在 2019 年 3 月至 12 月期间,0.581%的所有患者因饮食失调到急诊就诊。然而,在 2020 年同期,这一比例上升至 1.265%。使用 Benjamini-Hochberg 分析校正了统计学意义。尽管急诊就诊的总人数下降了 66.5%,但大流行期间因饮食失调就诊的患者比例增加了一倍。在大流行期间,等待安置的总时间显著增加,自报为跨性别和/或非二进制的患者人数也有所增加。我们的数据支持这样的假设,即饮食失调的就诊人数在大流行期间有所增加。