Author: Ulrich, Lisa; Macias, Charlie; George, Ashish; Bai, Shasha; Allen, Elizabeth
Title: Unexpected decline in pediatric asthma morbidity during the coronavirus pandemic Cord-id: ier5tbhr Document date: 2021_4_13
ID: ier5tbhr
Snippet: The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic profoundly impacted health care utilization. We evaluated asthmaâ€related emergency department (ED) and inpatient health care utilization by a countyâ€specific Medicaid population, ages 2–18, during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic and compared it to utilization from a 3â€year average including 2017–2019. Allâ€cause ED utilization and asthma medication fill rates were evaluated during the same timeframes. Relative to the 2017–2019 3â€year aver
Document: The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic profoundly impacted health care utilization. We evaluated asthmaâ€related emergency department (ED) and inpatient health care utilization by a countyâ€specific Medicaid population, ages 2–18, during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic and compared it to utilization from a 3â€year average including 2017–2019. Allâ€cause ED utilization and asthma medication fill rates were evaluated during the same timeframes. Relative to the 2017–2019 3â€year average, cumulative asthmaâ€related ED visits from January through June decreased by 45.8% (p = .03) and inpatient admission rates decreased by 50.5% (p = .03). The decline in asthmaâ€related ED utilization was greater than the reduction of overall ED use during the same time period, suggesting that the decline involved factors specific to asthma and was not due solely to avoidance of health care facilities. Fill rates for asthma controller medications decreased during this time (p = .03) and quick relief medication fill rates had no significant change (p = .31). Multiple factors may have contributed to the decrease in acute asthma health care visits. Locally, decreased air pollution and viral exposures coincided with the “Stayâ€atâ€home†order in Ohio, and increased utilization of telehealth for assessment during exacerbations may have impacted outcomes. Identification of the cause of the decline in visit rates could spur new interventions to limit the need for ED and inpatient visits for asthma patients, leading to both economic and healthâ€associated benefits.
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