Wambua Steven, Malla Lucas, Mbevi George, Nwosu Amen-Patrick, Tuti Timothy, Paton Chris, Cheburet Samuel, Manya Ayub, English Mike, Okiro Emelda A
Population Health Unit, Kenya Medical Research Institute-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
Health Services Unit, KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2021 Nov 17;1(11):e0000029. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000029. eCollection 2021.
The first case of severe acute respiratory coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was identified in March 2020 in Kenya resulting in the implementation of public health measures (PHM) to prevent large-scale epidemics. We aimed to quantify the impact of COVID-19 confinement measures on access to inpatient services using data from 204 Kenyan hospitals. Data on monthly admissions and deliveries from the District Health Information Software version 2 (DHIS 2) were extracted for the period January 2018 to March 2021 stratified by hospital ownership (public or private) and adjusting for missing data using multiple imputation (MI). We used the COVID-19 event as a natural experiment to examine the impact of COVID-19 and associated PHM on use of health services by hospital ownership. We estimated the impact of COVID-19 using two approaches; Statistical process control (SPC) charts to visualize and detect changes and Interrupted time series (ITS) analysis using negative-binomial segmented regression models to quantify the changes after March 2020. Sensitivity analysis was undertaken to test robustness of estimates using Generalised Estimating Equations (GEE) and impact of national health workers strike on observed trends. SPC charts showed reductions in most inpatient services starting April 2020. ITS modelling showed significant drops in April 2020 in monthly volumes of live-births (11%), over-fives admissions for medical (29%) and surgical care (25%) with the greatest declines in the under-five's admissions (59%) in public hospitals. Similar declines were apparent in private hospitals. Health worker strikes had a significant impact on post-COVID-19 trends for total deliveries, live-births and caesarean section rate in private hospitals. COVID-19 has disrupted utilization of inpatient services in Kenyan hospitals. This might have increased avoidable morbidity and mortality due to non-COVID-19-related illnesses. The declines have been sustained. Recent data suggests a reversal in trends with services appearing to be going back to pre- COVID levels.
2020年3月,肯尼亚确诊首例严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)病例,随后实施了公共卫生措施(PHM)以防止大规模疫情爆发。我们旨在利用来自204家肯尼亚医院的数据,量化新冠疫情防控措施对住院服务可及性的影响。提取了2018年1月至2021年3月期间地区卫生信息软件版本2(DHIS 2)中的月度入院和分娩数据,并按医院所有权(公立或私立)进行分层,使用多重填补法(MI)对缺失数据进行调整。我们将新冠疫情事件作为一项自然实验,以研究新冠疫情及相关公共卫生措施对不同所有制医院医疗服务使用情况的影响。我们使用两种方法评估新冠疫情的影响;统计过程控制(SPC)图用于可视化和检测变化,中断时间序列(ITS)分析使用负二项式分段回归模型来量化2020年3月之后的变化。进行了敏感性分析,以使用广义估计方程(GEE)检验估计值的稳健性,以及国家卫生工作者罢工对观察到的趋势的影响。SPC图显示,自2020年4月起,大多数住院服务量有所减少。ITS模型显示,2020年4月,活产月度数量(下降11%)、五岁以上儿童医疗入院(下降29%)和手术护理入院(下降25%)显著下降,其中公立医院五岁以下儿童入院下降幅度最大(59%)。私立医院也出现了类似的下降。卫生工作者罢工对私立医院新冠疫情后的总分娩量、活产数和剖宫产率趋势产生了重大影响。新冠疫情扰乱了肯尼亚医院住院服务的利用。这可能增加了因非新冠相关疾病导致的可避免的发病率和死亡率。这种下降趋势一直持续。最近的数据表明趋势出现逆转,服务似乎正在恢复到新冠疫情前的水平。