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Significant reduction in the visits to the emergency room department during the COVID-19 pandemic in a tertiary hospital in Greece

Authors :
Efstathios Kastritis
Konstantinos Tsitsimpis
Kimonas Stamatelopoulos
Efstathios Manios
Evangelos Kostis
Meletios A. Dimopoulos
Spyros Michopoulos
Ioannis Kanakakis
Evangelos Terpos
Sofoklis Kontogiannis
Ioannis Paraskevaidis
Ektoras Anninos
Sofia Chatzidou
Asimina Mitrakou
Christos Papamichail
Christos E. Lampropoulos
Source :
Medicine. 99:e23845
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.

Abstract

COVID-19 pandemic caused a major crisis, affecting and straining health care systems, including some very advanced ones. The pandemic may have also indirectly affected access to health care for patients with other conditions, not related to COVID-19, even in countries not overwhelmed by an outbreak.We analyzed and compared visits to the emergency room (ER) department during the same calendar period of 2019 and 2020 (from March 1 to March 31 of each year) in our hospital, a medium size, tertiary center, located in the center of Athens, which is not a referral center for COVID-19.Total ER visits were reduced by 42.3% and the number of those requiring hospitalization by 34.8%. This reduction was driven by lower numbers of visits for low risk, non-specific symptoms and causes. However, there was a significant decrease in admissions for cardiovascular symptoms and complications (chest pain of cardiac origin, acute coronary syndromes, and stroke) by 39.7% and for suspected or confirmed GI hemorrhage by 54.7%. Importantly, number of ER visits for infections remained unchanged, as well as the number of patients that required hospitalization for infection management; only few patients were diagnosed with COVID-19.During the initial period of the pandemic and lock-down in Greece, there was a major decrease in the patients visiting ER department, including decrease in the numbers of admissions for cardiovascular symptoms and complications. These observations may have implications for the management of non-COVID-19 diseases during the pandemic.

Details

ISSN :
15365964 and 00257974
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........065f10ea7d7a4478a4cb1567f7e90ca5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000023845