Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg Center for Health Economics, Hamburg, Germany.
Department of Cardiology, University Heart and Vascular Center, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Jan 4;24(1):32. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-10490-y.
The COVID-19 pandemic engendered numerous societal and economic challenges in addition to health-related concerns. Maintenance of healthcare utilization assumed immense significance during this period. However, few studies have examined the association between loneliness and cancelled medical appointments during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aimed to examine whether medical appointments are less likely to be cancelled with increased loneliness during a pandemic. We analyzed the association between loneliness and both patient- and provider-initiated appointment cancellations.
Cross-sectional data from the Hamburg City Health Study (HCHS) were collected during April 2020-November 2021. The analytical sample included 1,840 participants with an average age of 55.1 years (standard deviation: 6.5, range 45-76 years). Medical appointments cancelled by individuals-medical appointments in general, and GP, specialist, and dentist appointments-and appointments cancelled by healthcare providers served as outcome measures. Loneliness was quantified using a single item ranging from 0 to 10. Accordingly, we created empirical loneliness tertiles. Covariates were selected based on the Andersen model. Several penalized maximum likelihood logistic regressions were utilized to examine the association between loneliness and cancellation of medical appointments during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The penalized maximum likelihood logistic regressions showed that, compared to individuals in the lowest loneliness tertiles, individuals in the other two tertiles reported a higher chance of medical appointments cancellation by individuals, particularly driven by cancelled GP appointments. Except for age and sex, none of the covariates were comparably associated with the outcomes. When appointments cancelled by healthcare providers served as outcomes, only a higher number of chronic conditions was significantly positively associated with it.
Individuals scoring higher in loneliness had a greater chance of cancelling medical (particularly GP) appointments. This may contribute to a potential cascade of loneliness and skipped medical appointments in the future, resulting in adverse health outcomes over the medium-to-long term. Future research should examine whether lonely people are more likely to lack the social motivation to visit the doctor.
新冠疫情不仅引发了健康相关问题,还带来了诸多社会和经济挑战。在这一时期,维持医疗保健的利用至关重要。然而,很少有研究探讨孤独感与新冠疫情期间取消医疗预约之间的关系。本研究旨在探讨在大流行期间,孤独感是否与医疗预约更不容易被取消有关。我们分析了孤独感与患者和提供者发起的预约取消之间的关联。
本研究使用汉堡城市健康研究(HCHS)的横断面数据,数据收集时间为 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 11 月。分析样本包括 1840 名参与者,平均年龄为 55.1 岁(标准差:6.5,范围 45-76 岁)。个体取消的医疗预约-一般医疗预约、全科医生预约、专科医生预约和牙医预约-以及医疗保健提供者取消的预约作为结局指标。孤独感使用从 0 到 10 的单项评分进行量化。因此,我们创建了经验孤独感三分位。根据安德森模型选择协变量。使用多个惩罚最大似然逻辑回归来检验孤独感与新冠疫情期间取消医疗预约之间的关联。
惩罚最大似然逻辑回归显示,与处于最低孤独感三分位的个体相比,处于其他两个三分位的个体报告个人取消医疗预约的可能性更高,特别是取消全科医生预约的可能性更高。除了年龄和性别,没有一个协变量与结局具有可比性。当以医疗保健提供者取消的预约作为结局时,只有更多的慢性疾病与之显著正相关。
孤独感得分较高的个体更有可能取消医疗(特别是全科医生)预约。这可能导致未来孤独感和错过医疗预约的潜在级联反应,从而导致中长期间的不良健康后果。未来的研究应探讨孤独的人是否更有可能缺乏去看医生的社会动机。