Suppr超能文献

骨科患者在 COVID-19 大流行开始后身心健康状况是否发生了变化?

Did the Physical and Mental Health of Orthopaedic Patients Change After the Onset of the COVID-19 Pandemic?

机构信息

Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.

出版信息

Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2023 May 1;481(5):935-944. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002555. Epub 2023 Jan 25.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has been associated with poor mental health outcomes and widened health disparities in the United States. Given the inter-relationship between psychosocial factors and functional outcomes in orthopaedic surgery, it is important that we understand whether patients presenting for musculoskeletal care during the pandemic were associated with worse physical and mental health than before the pandemic's onset.

QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Did patients seen for an initial visit by an orthopaedic provider during the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrate worse physical function, pain interference, depression, and/or anxiety than patients seen before the pandemic, as measured by the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) instrument? (2) During the COVID-19 pandemic, did patients living in areas with high levels of social deprivation demonstrate worse patterns of physical function, pain interference, depression, or anxiety on initial presentation to an orthopaedic provider than patients living in areas with low levels of social deprivation, compared with prepandemic PROMIS scores?

METHODS

This was a retrospective, comparative study of new patient evaluations that occurred in the orthopaedic department at a large, urban tertiary care academic medical center. During the study period, PROMIS computer adaptive tests were routinely administered to patients at clinical visits. Between January 1, 2019, and December 31, 2019, we identified 26,989 new patients; we excluded 4% (1038 of 26,989) for being duplicates, 4% (1034 of 26,989) for having incomplete demographic data, 44% (11,925 of 26,989) for not having a nine-digit home ZIP Code recorded, and 5% (1332 of 26,989) for not completing all four PROMIS computer adaptive tests of interest. This left us with 11,660 patients in the "before COVID-19" cohort. Between January 1, 2021 and December 31, 2021, we identified 30,414 new patients; we excluded 5% (1554 of 30,414) for being duplicates, 4% (1142 of 30,414) for having incomplete demographic data, 41% (12,347 of 30,414) for not having a nine-digit home ZIP Code recorded, and 7% (2219 of 30,414) for not completing all four PROMIS computer adaptive tests of interest. This left us with 13,152 patients in the "during COVID-19" cohort. Nine-digit home ZIP Codes were used to determine patients' Area Deprivation Indexes, a neighborhood-level composite measure of social deprivation. To ensure that patients included in the study represented our overall patient population, we performed univariate analyses on available demographic and PROMIS data between patients included in the study and those excluded from the study, which revealed no differences (results not shown). In the before COVID-19 cohort, the mean age was 57 ± 16 years, 60% (7046 of 11,660) were women, 86% (10,079 of 11,660) were White non-Hispanic, and the mean national Area Deprivation Index percentile was 47 ± 25. In the during COVID-19 cohort, the mean age was 57 ± 16 years, 61% (8051 of 13,152) were women, 86% (11,333 of 13,152) were White non-Hispanic, and the mean national Area Deprivation Index percentile was 46 ± 25. The main outcome measures in this study were the PROMIS Physical Function ([PF], version 2.0), Pain Interference ([PI], version 1.1), Depression (version 1.0), and Anxiety (version 1.0). PROMIS scores follow a normal distribution with a mean t-score of 50 and a standard deviation of 10. Higher PROMIS PF scores indicate better self-reported physical capability, whereas higher PROMIS PI, Depression, and Anxiety scores indicate more difficulty managing pain, depression, and anxiety symptoms, respectively. Clinically meaningful differences in PROMIS scores between the cohorts were based on a minimum clinically important difference (MCID) threshold of 4 points. Multivariable linear regression models were created to determine whether presentation to an orthopaedic provider during the pandemic was associated with worse PROMIS scores than for patients who presented before the pandemic. Regression coefficients (ß) represent the estimated difference in PROMIS scores that would be expected for patients who presented during the pandemic compared with patients who presented before the pandemic, after adjusting for confounding variables. Regression coefficients were evaluated in the context of clinical importance and statistical significance. Regression coefficients equal to or greater than the MCID of 4 points were considered clinically important, whereas p values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

RESULTS

We found no clinically important differences in baseline physical and mental health PROMIS scores between new patients who presented to an orthopaedic provider before the COVID-19 pandemic and those who presented during the COVID-19 pandemic (PROMIS PF: ß -0.2 [95% confidence interval -0.43 to 0.03]; p = 0.09; PROMIS PI: ß 0.06 [95% CI -0.13 to 0.25]; p = 0.57; PROMIS Depression: ß 0.09 [95% CI -0.14 to 0.33]; p = 0.44; PROMIS Anxiety: ß 0.58 [95% CI 0.33 to 0.84]; p < 0.001). Although patients from areas with high levels of social deprivation had worse PROMIS scores than patients from areas with low levels of social deprivation, patients from areas with high levels of social deprivation demonstrated no clinically important differences in PROMIS scores when groups before and during the pandemic were compared (PROMIS PF: ß -0.23 [95% CI -0.80 to 0.33]; p = 0.42; PROMIS PI: ß 0.18 [95% CI -0.31 to 0.67]; p = 0.47; PROMIS Depression: ß 0.42 [95% CI -0.26 to 1.09]; p = 0.23; PROMIS Anxiety: ß 0.84 [95% CI 0.16 to 1.52]; p = 0.02).

CONCLUSION

Contrary to studies describing worse physical and mental health since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, we found no changes in the health status of orthopaedic patients on initial presentation to their provider. Although large-scale action to mitigate the effects of worsening physical or mental health of orthopaedic patients may not be needed at this time, orthopaedic providers should remain aware of the psychosocial needs of their patients and advocate on behalf of those who may benefit from intervention. Our study is limited in part to patients who had the self-agency to access specialty orthopaedic care, and therefore may underestimate the true changes in the physical or mental health status of all patients with musculoskeletal conditions. Future longitudinal studies evaluating the impact of specific COVID-19-related factors (for example, delays in medical care, social isolation, or financial loss) on orthopaedic outcomes may be helpful to prepare for future pandemics or natural disasters.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

Level II, prognostic study.

摘要

背景

2019 年新型冠状病毒(COVID-19)大流行与美国心理健康状况恶化和健康差距扩大有关。鉴于矫形外科手术中社会心理因素与功能结果之间的相互关系,了解在大流行期间接受肌肉骨骼护理的患者与大流行前相比,其身体和心理健康状况是否更差非常重要。

问题/目的:(1)在 COVID-19 大流行期间,与大流行前相比,初次就诊的接受矫形提供者治疗的患者的身体功能、疼痛干扰、抑郁和/或焦虑等方面的状况是否更差,这是通过患者报告的结果测量信息系统(PROMIS)工具来衡量的?(2)在 COVID-19 大流行期间,与生活在社会贫困程度较低地区的患者相比,生活在社会贫困程度较高地区的患者在初次就诊时的身体功能、疼痛干扰、抑郁或焦虑等方面是否存在更差的模式,与大流行前的 PROMIS 评分相比?

方法

这是一项在大型城市三级学术医疗中心的矫形外科进行的新患者评估的回顾性、比较性研究。在研究期间,在临床就诊时常规进行 PROMIS 计算机自适应测试。在 2019 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 12 月 31 日期间,我们确定了 26989 名新患者;我们排除了 4%(1038/26989)的重复患者,4%(1034/26989)的患者有不完整的人口统计学数据,44%(11925/26989)的患者没有记录的九个数字家庭邮政编码,5%(1332/26989)的患者没有完成所有四个感兴趣的 PROMIS 计算机自适应测试。这使得我们在“COVID-19 之前”队列中有 11660 名患者。在 2021 年 1 月 1 日至 2021 年 12 月 31 日期间,我们确定了 30414 名新患者;我们排除了 5%(1554/30414)的重复患者,4%(1142/30414)的患者有不完整的人口统计学数据,41%(12347/30414)的患者没有记录的九个数字家庭邮政编码,7%(2219/30414)的患者没有完成所有四个感兴趣的 PROMIS 计算机自适应测试。这使得我们在“COVID-19 期间”队列中有 13152 名患者。九个数字家庭邮政编码用于确定患者的区域剥夺指数,这是一个衡量社会贫困程度的邻里综合指标。为了确保纳入研究的患者代表我们的整体患者群体,我们对纳入研究的患者和排除的患者进行了可用人口统计学和 PROMIS 数据的单变量分析,结果显示没有差异(未显示结果)。在“COVID-19 之前”队列中,平均年龄为 57 ± 16 岁,60%(7046/11660)为女性,86%(10079/11660)为白种非西班牙裔,平均全国区域剥夺指数百分位为 47 ± 25。在“COVID-19 期间”队列中,平均年龄为 57 ± 16 岁,61%(8051/13152)为女性,86%(11333/13152)为白种非西班牙裔,平均全国区域剥夺指数百分位为 46 ± 25。本研究的主要结局指标是患者报告的结果测量信息系统(PROMIS)身体功能([PF],版本 2.0)、疼痛干扰([PI],版本 1.1)、抑郁(版本 1.0)和焦虑(版本 1.0)。PROMIS 评分遵循正态分布,平均 t 评分 50,标准差 10。较高的 PROMIS PF 评分表示自我报告的身体能力更好,而较高的 PROMIS PI、抑郁和焦虑评分则表示疼痛、抑郁和焦虑症状的管理更困难。在两个队列之间,PROMIS 评分的临床有意义差异基于 4 分的最小临床重要差异(MCID)阈值。创建多变量线性回归模型以确定在大流行期间向矫形提供者就诊是否与大流行前就诊的患者相比,PROMIS 评分更差。回归系数(ß)代表与大流行前就诊的患者相比,在大流行期间就诊的患者的 PROMIS 评分预计会有差异,调整了混杂变量后。回归系数在临床重要性和统计学意义的背景下进行评估。等于或大于 MCID 的 4 分的回归系数被认为具有临床意义,而 p 值 < 0.05 则被认为具有统计学意义。

结果

我们发现,在 COVID-19 大流行期间初次就诊的新患者与大流行前就诊的患者在基线身体和心理健康 PROMIS 评分方面没有明显差异(PROMIS PF:ß-0.2 [95%置信区间-0.43 至 0.03];p = 0.09;PROMIS PI:ß 0.06 [95%置信区间-0.13 至 0.25];p = 0.57;PROMIS 抑郁:ß 0.09 [95%置信区间-0.14 至 0.33];p = 0.44;PROMIS 焦虑:ß 0.58 [95%置信区间 0.33 至 0.84];p < 0.001)。尽管来自社会贫困程度较高地区的患者的 PROMIS 评分比来自社会贫困程度较低地区的患者差,但在比较大流行前和大流行期间的两组患者时,来自社会贫困程度较高地区的患者在 PROMIS 评分方面没有明显差异(PROMIS PF:ß-0.23 [95%置信区间-0.80 至 0.33];p = 0.42;PROMIS PI:ß 0.18 [95%置信区间-0.31 至 0.67];p = 0.47;PROMIS 抑郁:ß 0.42 [95%置信区间-0.26 至 1.09];p = 0.23;PROMIS 焦虑:ß 0.84 [95%置信区间 0.16 至 1.52];p = 0.02)。

结论

与大流行开始以来身体和心理健康状况恶化的研究相反,我们发现矫形患者初次就诊时的健康状况没有变化。尽管目前可能不需要采取大规模行动来缓解矫形患者身体或心理健康恶化的情况,但矫形提供者应始终了解患者的社会心理需求,并为可能需要干预的患者代言。我们的研究部分限于有能力自行接受专科矫形护理的患者,因此可能低估了所有患有肌肉骨骼疾病的患者的身体或心理健康状况的真实变化。未来的纵向研究评估特定 COVID-19 相关因素(例如,医疗护理延迟、社会隔离、或经济损失)对矫形结果的影响可能有助于为未来的大流行或自然灾害做准备。

证据水平

2 级,预后研究。

相似文献

4
How Should We Measure Social Deprivation in Orthopaedic Patients?我们应该如何衡量骨科患者的社会剥夺程度?
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2022 Feb 1;480(2):325-339. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002044.

引用本文的文献

1
Delivery of Hand Care to Patients With High Anxiety Burden.为高焦虑负担患者提供手部护理。
J Hand Surg Am. 2024 Dec;49(12):1212-1218. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2024.08.005. Epub 2024 Sep 21.

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验