Departments of Emergency Medicine and Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York.
Department of Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York.
Pediatrics. 2023 Nov 1;152(5). doi: 10.1542/peds.2022-060553.
To describe the proportion of pediatric mental health emergency department (MH-ED) visits across 5 COVID-19 waves in New York City (NYC) and to examine the relationship between MH-ED visits, COVID-19 prevalence, and societal restrictions.
We conducted a time-series analysis of MH-ED visits among patients ages 5 to 17 years using the INSIGHT Clinical Research Network, a database from 5 medical centers in NYC from January 1, 2016, to June 12, 2022. We estimated seasonally adjusted changes in MH-ED visit rates during the COVID-19 pandemic, compared with predicted prepandemic levels, specific to each COVID-19 wave and stratified by mental health diagnoses and sociodemographic characteristics. We estimated associations between MH-ED visit rates, COVID-19 prevalence, and societal restrictions measured by the Stringency Index.
Of 686 500 ED visits in the cohort, 27 168 (4.0%) were MH-ED visits. The proportion of MH-ED visits was higher during each COVID-19 wave compared with predicted prepandemic trends. Increased MH-ED visits were seen for eating disorders across all waves; anxiety disorders in all except wave 3; depressive disorders and suicidality/self-harm in wave 2; and substance use disorders in waves 2, 4, and 5. MH-ED visits were increased from expected among female, adolescent, Asian race, high Child Opportunity Index patients. There was no association between MH-ED visits and NYC COVID-19 prevalence or NY State Stringency Index.
The proportion of pediatric MH-ED visits during the COVID-19 pandemic was higher during each wave compared with the predicted prepandemic period, with varied increases among diagnostic and sociodemographic subgroups. Enhanced pediatric mental health resources are essential to address these findings.
描述纽约市(NYC)5 个 COVID-19 波次期间儿科精神科急诊就诊的比例,并研究精神科急诊就诊与 COVID-19 流行、社会限制之间的关系。
我们利用 INSIGHT 临床研究网络对 5 家医疗中心 2016 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 6 月 12 日期间 5 至 17 岁患者的精神科急诊就诊进行了时间序列分析。我们针对每个 COVID-19 波次和按精神健康诊断和社会人口统计学特征分层,估计了 COVID-19 大流行期间与预测大流行前水平相比精神科急诊就诊率的季节性调整变化。我们估计了精神科急诊就诊率与 COVID-19 流行率以及 Stringency Index 衡量的社会限制之间的关联。
在该队列的 686500 次急诊就诊中,有 27168 次(4.0%)为精神科急诊就诊。与预测大流行前趋势相比,在每个 COVID-19 波次期间精神科急诊就诊的比例都更高。在所有波次中,进食障碍的精神科急诊就诊都有所增加;除了第 3 波次外,焦虑障碍在所有波次中都增加;抑郁障碍和自杀意念/自伤在第 2 波次中增加;物质使用障碍在第 2、4 和 5 波次中增加。女性、青少年、亚洲人种、儿童机会指数较高的患者精神科急诊就诊高于预期。精神科急诊就诊与纽约市 COVID-19 流行率或纽约州 Stringency Index 之间没有关联。
与预测大流行前时期相比,COVID-19 大流行期间儿科精神科急诊就诊的比例在每个波次期间都更高,在不同诊断和社会人口统计学亚组中增加程度不同。必须加强儿科精神卫生资源,以应对这些发现。