Open Access
CMAJ, volume 193, issue 21, pages E753-E760
A population-based analysis of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on common abdominal and gynecological emergency department visits
D. Gomez
,
Andrea N. Simpson
,
Colin Sue-Chue-Lam
,
C. de Mestral
,
Fahima Dossa
,
Jordan Nantais
,
Andrew Wilton
,
David R. Urbach
,
Peter Richard Austin
,
Nancy N. Baxter
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-05-24
Journal:
CMAJ
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.287
CiteScore: 8.3
Impact factor: 9.4
ISSN: 00084409, 08203946, 14882329
General Medicine
Abstract
Reduced use of the emergency department during the COVID-19 pandemic may result in increased disease acuity when patients do seek health care services. We sought to evaluate emergency department visits for common abdominal and gynecologic conditions before and at the beginning of the pandemic to determine whether changes in emergency department attendance had serious consequences for patients.We conducted a population-based analysis using administrative data to evaluate the weekly rate of emergency department visits pre-COVID-19 (Jan. 1-Mar. 10, 2020) and during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic (Mar. 11-June 30, 2020), compared with a historical control period (Jan. 1-July 1, 2019). All residents of Ontario, Canada, presenting to the emergency department with appendicitis, cholecystitis, ectopic pregnancy or miscarriage were included. We evaluated weekly incidence rate ratios (IRRs) of emergency department visits, management strategies and clinical outcomes.Across all study periods, 39 691 emergency department visits met inclusion criteria (40.2 % appendicitis, 32.1% miscarriage, 21.3% cholecystitis, 6.4% ectopic pregnancy). Baseline characteristics of patients presenting to the emergency department did not vary across study periods. After an initial reduction in emergency department visits, presentations for cholecystitis and ectopic pregnancy quickly returned to expected levels. However, presentations for appendicitis and miscarriage showed sustained reductions (IRR 0.61-0.80), with 1087 and 984 fewer visits, respectively, after the start of the pandemic, relative to 2019. Management strategies, complications and mortality rates were similar across study periods for all conditions.Although our study showed evidence of emergency department avoidance in Ontario during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, no adverse consequences were evident. Emergency care and outcomes for patients were similar before and during the pandemic.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Profiles