Department of Pediatrics, Nemours Children's Hospital, Wilmington, DE, USA.
Nemours Center for Healthcare Delivery Science, Wilmington, DE, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2023 Jul-Aug;138(4):633-644. doi: 10.1177/00333549231163527. Epub 2023 Apr 4.
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted traditional health care, including pediatric health care. We described the impact of the pandemic on disparities in pediatric health care engagement.
Using a population-based cross-sectional time-series design, we compared monthly ambulatory care visit volume and completion rates (completed vs no-show and cancelled visits) among pediatric patients aged 0-21 years in 4 states in the mid-Atlantic United States during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic (March 2020-February 2021) with the same period before the pandemic (March 2019-February 2020). We used unadjusted odds ratios, stratified by visit type (telehealth or in-person) and sociodemographic characteristics (child race and ethnicity, caregiver primary language, geocoded Child Opportunity Index, and rurality).
We examined 1 556 548 scheduled ambulatory care visits for a diverse pediatric patient population. Visit volume and completion rates (mean, 70.1%) decreased during the first months of the pandemic but returned to prepandemic levels by June 2020. Disparities in in-person visit completion rates among non-Hispanic Black versus non-Hispanic White patients (64.9% vs 74.3%), patients from socioeconomically disadvantaged versus advantaged communities as measured by Child Opportunity Index (65.8% vs 76.4%), and patients in rural versus urban neighborhoods (66.0% vs 70.8%) were the same during the remainder of the first year of the pandemic as compared with the previous year. Concurrent with large increases in telehealth (0.5% prepandemic, 19.0% during the pandemic), telehealth completion rates increased.
Disparities in pediatric visit completion rates that existed before the pandemic persisted during the pandemic. These findings underscore the need for culturally tailored practices to reduce disparities in pediatric health care engagement.
COVID-19 大流行扰乱了传统的医疗保健,包括儿科医疗保健。我们描述了大流行对儿科医疗保健参与度差距的影响。
使用基于人群的横断面时间序列设计,我们比较了美国中大西洋 4 个州 0-21 岁儿科患者在 COVID-19 大流行第一年(2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 2 月)与大流行前同期(2019 年 3 月至 2020 年 2 月)每月门诊就诊量和完成率(完成与未出现和取消就诊)。我们使用未经调整的优势比,按就诊类型(远程医疗或亲自就诊)和社会人口学特征(儿童种族和民族、照顾者主要语言、地理编码的儿童机会指数和农村地区)进行分层。
我们检查了 1556548 次有代表性的儿科患者预约门诊就诊。在大流行的头几个月,就诊量和完成率(平均为 70.1%)下降,但到 2020 年 6 月恢复到大流行前水平。非西班牙裔黑人与非西班牙裔白人患者亲自就诊完成率(64.9%比 74.3%)、按儿童机会指数衡量的社会经济劣势与优势社区之间的患者(65.8%比 76.4%)以及农村与城市社区之间的患者(66.0%比 70.8%)的差距在大流行的剩余时间内与前一年相同。与远程医疗大幅增加(大流行前为 0.5%,大流行期间为 19.0%)同时,远程医疗完成率也有所提高。
大流行前存在的儿科就诊完成率差距在大流行期间持续存在。这些发现强调了需要采取文化上合适的做法来减少儿科医疗保健参与度的差距。