虚弱解释了 COVID-19 大流行期间老年退伍军人使用急诊科的差异。

Justine Seidenfeld, Karen M Stechuchak, Valerie A Smith, Catherine Stanwyck, Chelsea Perfect, Courtney Van Houtven, Susan Nicole Hastings
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摘要

导言:在 COVID-19 大流行期间,老年人极易受到医疗服务中断的影响,但急诊室使用率的变化是否因患者特征而异尚无定论。我们利用一个老年退伍军人队列,研究了急诊室就诊率根据年龄、种族、地区贫困指数和虚弱程度这四个相关特征而发生的变化:参与者年龄≥65岁,在2018年2月2日至2019年7月5日期间在初级或老年诊所就诊≥2次。针对每个特征构建调整后的负二项回归模型。我们按季度分别报告了亚组所有急诊就诊人数的平均值,并报告了比率比,以比较 COVID-19 大流行第一年与前一年的急诊就诊人数:有完整病例数据的患者人数为 38,871 人。在前两个季度,所有亚群的急诊就诊率都有所下降,第三和第四季度的差异更大。在 COVID 前和 COVID 期间,极度虚弱者的人均急诊就诊次数估计最高,在大流行期间的多个季度,他们的急诊就诊次数也显著减少,减少程度高于其他虚弱亚群:结论:根据虚弱程度对老年人进行分层,发现了在 COVID 期间急诊室就诊人次变化最大的患者亚群。非常虚弱的患者需要特别关注,以了解急诊室使用率的变化如何影响患者的预后。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Frailty Explains Variation in Emergency Department Use for Older Veterans During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Introduction: Older adults were critically vulnerable to disruptions in health care during the COVID-19 pandemic, but it is not known if changes in ED utilization varied based on patient characteristics. Using a cohort of older Veterans, we examined changes in ED visit rates based on four characteristics of interest: age, race, area deprivation index, and frailty.

Methods: Participants were aged ≥65, with ≥2 visits in primary or geriatric clinics between 02/02/2018-05/07/2019. An adjusted negative binomial regression model was constructed for each characteristic. We report mean counts of all ED visits by quarter for subgroups separately, and report rate ratios to compare ED visits in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic to the year before.

Results: Patients with complete case data numbered 38,871. During the first two quarters, all subgroups had decreased ED visits, with more variation in the third and fourth quarters. The very highly frail, who had the highest mean estimated count of ED visits per person through both pre-COVID and COVID periods, also had a significant decrease in their ED visits during multiple quarters of the pandemic to a greater degree than other frailty subgroups.

Conclusion: Stratifying older adults by frailty identified patient subgroups with the greatest variation in ED visits during COVID. Very highly frail patients warrant special attention to understand how variation in ED utilization affects patient outcomes.

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