Obeid Nicole, Coelho Jennifer S, Booij Linda, Dimitropoulos Gina, Silva-Roy Patricia, Bartram Mary, Clement Fiona, de Oliveira Claire, Katzman Debra K
Eating Disorders Research Lab, Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, 401 Smyth Rd, K1H 8L1, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
J Eat Disord. 2024 Apr 26;12(1):52. doi: 10.1186/s40337-024-01003-1.
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on young people with eating disorders (EDs) and their families was profound, with surging rates of hospitalizations and referrals reported internationally. This paper provides an account of the additional health and social costs of ED care for young people living in Canada incurred during the COVID-19 pandemic, drawing attention to the available data to inform these estimates while noting gaps in data capacities to account for a full view of the ED system of care.
Three methodologies were used to capture costs: (1) provincial administrative data holdings available at the Canadian Institute of Health Information (CIHI) were used by Deloitte Access Economics to conduct analyses on costs related to hospitalizations, emergency room visits, outpatient visits with physicians and loss of well-being from being on a waitlist. These were examined across three fiscal years (April 1 to March 31, 2019-2022) to compare costs from one year before to two years after the onset of the pandemic, (2) data collected on support-based community ED organizations and, (3) costs identified by young people, caregivers and health care professionals.
Estimates of additional health care costs and social costs arising from ED care waitlists were estimated to have increased by 21% across the two years after the onset of the pandemic and is likely to represent an underestimate of costs. Costs related to some standard ED care services (e.g. day treatment programs) and support-based community ED organizations that saw a 118% increase in services during this time, are some examples of costs not captured in the current cost estimate.
This paper provides a first account of the additional health and social ED care costs associated with the pandemic, which indicate at minimum, a 21% increase. The results invite discussion for more investments in ED services for young people in Canada, as it is unclear if needs are expected to remain elevated. We suggest a call for a national surveillance strategy to improve data holdings to aid in managing services and informing policy. A robust strategy could open the door for much-needed, data-informed, system transformation efforts that can improve ED care for youth, families and clinicians.
新冠疫情对患有饮食失调症(ED)的年轻人及其家庭产生了深远影响,国际上报告的住院率和转诊率激增。本文阐述了新冠疫情期间加拿大境内患有饮食失调症的年轻人接受 ED 护理所产生的额外健康和社会成本,提请注意用于这些估算的现有数据,同时指出数据能力方面的差距,以便全面了解 ED 护理系统。
采用了三种方法来计算成本:(1)德勤经济咨询公司利用加拿大卫生信息研究所(CIHI)提供的省级行政数据,对与住院、急诊就诊、门诊医生诊疗以及等待名单导致的幸福感丧失相关的成本进行分析。在三个财政年度(2019 年 4 月 1 日至 2022 年 3 月 31 日)对这些数据进行了审查,以比较疫情爆发前一年到疫情爆发后两年的成本,(2)收集了基于支持的社区 ED 组织的数据,以及(3)由年轻人、照顾者和医疗保健专业人员确定的成本。
据估计,疫情爆发后的两年里,ED 护理等待名单产生的额外医疗保健成本和社会成本增加了 21%,而且这可能是对成本的低估。与某些标准 ED 护理服务(如日间治疗项目)以及在此期间服务量增长了 118%的基于支持的社区 ED 组织相关的成本,是当前成本估算中未涵盖的成本示例。
本文首次阐述了与疫情相关的额外健康和社会 ED 护理成本,至少表明成本增加了 21%。鉴于尚不清楚需求是否会持续居高不下,这些结果引发了关于加大对加拿大年轻人 ED 服务投资的讨论。我们建议呼吁制定一项国家监测战略,以改善数据收集,助力管理服务并为政策提供依据。一项强有力的战略可为急需的、基于数据的系统转型努力打开大门,从而改善对青少年、家庭和临床医生的 ED 护理。