Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Adult Asthma-Related Healthcare Utilization.

Lizbeth F Gómez, Kimberly D Lactaoen, Patrick K Gleeson, Alana Schreibman, Jason D Christie, Andrea J Apter, Rebecca A Hubbard, Gary E Weissman, Blanca E Himes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic prompted unprecedented changes to chronic disease self-management and healthcare systems worldwide, including shifts in access to services and medications. While children with asthma had decreased exacerbations and healthcare encounters during 2020, the impact of lockdowns on adults with asthma, who faced different challenges during the pandemic than children, are less understood.

Objective: We sought to characterize changes in adult asthma-related healthcare utilization during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 versus prior (2017-2019) and subsequent (2021-2024) years by leveraging electronic health record (EHR) data from a large, multi-hospital health system in a major US city.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective EHR database study of 42,242 adults with asthma who received care at Penn Medicine from 2017 to 2024. We analyzed weekly encounter counts across five encounter types (refill, telemedicine, telephone/audio, outpatient, emergency encounters) and prescriptions for short-acting beta agonists (SABA), inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), and oral corticosteroids (OCS). Generalized linear models assessed changes in asthma-related encounter rate in pandemic (2020) and post-pandemic (2021-2024) periods relative to pre-pandemic (2017-2019). We stratified on weekly intervals that captured transitional timepoints in healthcare utilization in 2020 (Weeks 1-8, 9-18, and 19-52).

Results: In 2017-2019, there were on average 397 weekly visits for asthma at Penn Medicine; in 2020, the weekly average increased to 481. This change was driven primarily by a surge during the lockdown weeks in refill and telemedicine encounters by 123% and 36,445%, respectively and by a decrease in outpatient visits by 65%. During the lockdown weeks in 2020, asthma related prescriptions of SABA and ICS prescriptions increased 73% and 43%, respectively, compared to pre-pandemic years, while OCS prescriptions decreased by 5%. White patients showed earlier healthcare-seeking responses than other racial groups. Changes persisted in post-pandemic years as the average of weekly asthma-related visits was 445 in 2021-2024. Telemedicine remained 38-76 times higher than pre-pandemic baseline, refills doubled compared to 2017-2019 levels, and outpatient visits remained 35-43% below pre-pandemic levels.

Conclusion: COVID-19 transformed adult asthma care delivery and led to sustained increases in virtual care and medication refills potentially due to virtual care compensating for reductions in traditional outpatient encounters.

COVID-19大流行对成人哮喘相关医疗保健利用的影响
背景:2019冠状病毒病大流行促使全球慢性病自我管理和卫生保健系统发生了前所未有的变化,包括服务和药物可及性的转变。虽然在2020年期间,哮喘儿童的病情恶化和就医次数有所减少,但人们对成人哮喘患者的影响了解较少,成人哮喘患者在大流行期间面临的挑战与儿童不同。目的:我们试图通过利用来自美国一个主要城市的大型多医院卫生系统的电子健康记录(EHR)数据,描述2020年COVID-19大流行期间成人哮喘相关医疗保健利用情况与之前(2017-2019)和随后(2021-2024)年的变化。方法:我们对2017年至2024年在宾夕法尼亚大学医学院接受治疗的42242名成人哮喘患者进行了回顾性电子病历数据库研究。我们分析了五种就诊类型(补充、远程医疗、电话/音频、门诊、紧急就诊)的每周就诊次数,以及短效β受体激动剂(SABA)、吸入皮质类固醇(ICS)和口服皮质类固醇(OCS)的处方。广义线性模型评估了大流行(2020年)和大流行后(2021-2024年)期间与大流行前(2017-2019年)相比哮喘相关偶遇率的变化。我们对2020年医疗保健利用的过渡时间点(第1-8周、第9-18周和第19-52周)按周间隔进行分层。结果:2017-2019年,宾夕法尼亚大学医学院哮喘患者平均每周就诊397次;到2020年,每周平均人数增加到481人。这一变化的主要原因是,在封锁周期间,再次就诊和远程医疗的人数分别激增123%和36445%,门诊就诊人数减少了65%。在2020年的封锁周期间,与大流行前相比,与哮喘相关的SABA和ICS处方分别增加了73%和43%,而OCS处方减少了5%。白人患者比其他种族的患者更早地表现出寻求医疗保健的反应。在大流行后的几年里,这种变化持续存在,2021-2024年,每周与哮喘相关的平均就诊次数为445次。远程医疗仍然是大流行前基线的38-76倍,再填充量是2017-2019年水平的两倍,门诊访问量仍然比大流行前水平低35-43%。结论:COVID-19改变了成人哮喘护理服务,并导致虚拟护理和药物补充持续增加,这可能是由于虚拟护理弥补了传统门诊就诊的减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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