Seidenfeld Justine, Dalton Aaron, Vashi Anita A
Duke University School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Center for Innovation to Implementation, Palo Alto, California.
West J Emerg Med. 2025 Jun 20;26(4):869-875. doi: 10.5811/westjem.18714.
To better understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on emergency department (ED) utilization, we examined two years of Veterans Health Administration (VHA) ED visits. Emergent and non-emergent ED visits were examined separately to understand the impact of systems-level changes in healthcare delivery.
In this retrospective, observational cohort study we examined ED visits in 111 EDs within the VHA from March 2018-February 2022. Primary outcome was the count of emergent and non-emergent ED visits, using incident rate ratios (IRR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) to examine ED visits during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in eight separate quarters, compared to two years of seasonally equivalent quarters before COVID-19.
Over the four-year period, US veterans made 8,057,011 ED visits, with 54.7% in the eight pre-COVID-19 quarters, and 45.3% in the first eight quarters during the COVID-19 pandemic. Both emergent and non-emergent visit counts decreased in each of the first eight quarters during COVID-19 when compared to their respective pre-COVID-19 baseline. The change in emergent visits ranged between -26.9% (March-May 2020; IRR 0.73, 95% CI 0.72-0.74) and -7.0% (June-August 2021; IRR 0.93, 95% CI 0.92-0.94). The change in non-emergent visits ranged between -33.0% (March-May 2020; IRR 0.67, 95% CI 0.67-0.67) and -5.7% (June-August 2021; IRR 0.94, 95% CI 0.94-0.95). After the first six months of the pandemic, emergent ED visits had a sustained greater decrease compared to non-emergent visits.
As of 2022, ED visits had not returned to pre-pandemic baselines, and our results suggest that emergent visits have sustained a greater decrease even in the second year of the pandemic compared to their respective, seasonally equivalent pre-pandemic quarters from March 2018-February 2020. The finding that emergent visits decreased more than non-emergent is notable given that system-level changes in care delivery, particularly a shift toward use of telehealth, would be expected to have a greater impact on non-emergent care. More work is needed to understand whether acute care is being forgone altogether, as well as the subsequent impact.
为了更好地理解2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行对急诊科(ED)就诊率的影响,我们对退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)两年的急诊科就诊情况进行了研究。分别对急诊和非急诊就诊情况进行了检查,以了解医疗服务系统层面变化的影响。
在这项回顾性观察性队列研究中,我们检查了2018年3月至2022年2月期间VHA内111个急诊科的就诊情况。主要结果是急诊和非急诊就诊的次数,使用发病率比(IRR)和95%置信区间(CI)来检查COVID-19大流行前两年中八个不同季度的急诊科就诊情况,并与COVID-19之前季节性相当的两年季度进行比较。
在这四年期间,美国退伍军人进行了8,057,011次急诊科就诊,其中54.7%发生在COVID-19之前的八个季度,45.3%发生在COVID-上19大流行的前八个季度。与各自COVID-19之前的基线相比,COVID-19期间前八个季度的急诊和非急诊就诊次数均有所下降。急诊就诊次数的变化范围在-26.9%(2020年3月至5月;IRR 0.73,95% CI 0.72 - 0.74)和-7.0%(2021年6月至8月;IRR 0.93,95% CI 0.92 - 0.94)之间。非急诊就诊次数的变化范围在-33.0%(2020年3月至5月;IRR 0.67,95% CI 0.67 - 0.67)和-5.7%(2021年6月至8月;IRR 0.94,95% CI 0.94 - 0.95)之间。在大流行的前六个月之后,与非急诊就诊相比,急诊就诊的持续下降幅度更大。
截至2022年,急诊科就诊次数尚未恢复到大流行前的基线水平,我们的结果表明,即使在大流行的第二年,与2018年3月至2020年2月各自季节性相当的大流行前季度相比,急诊就诊次数的持续下降幅度更大。鉴于医疗服务系统层面的变化,特别是向使用远程医疗的转变,预计会对非急诊护理产生更大影响,急诊就诊次数下降幅度大于非急诊就诊次数这一发现值得注意。需要开展更多工作来了解急性护理是否被完全放弃以及后续影响。