Understanding the fatal burden of COVID-19 in residential aged care homes in Australia: Using linked data to generate evidence

AimTo quantify the impact of the pandemic on fatal burden of disease among those living in residential aged care homes (RACH) in Australia. MethodsUsing Residential Aged Care data linked to Death Registrations (Jan 2016 to 11 Aug 2022), we estimated years of life lost per person-year (YLL/py) among...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of population data science 2024-09, Vol.9 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Welsh, Jennifer, Joshy, Grace, Freeman-Robinson, Rachel, Biddle, Nicholas, Banks, Emily, Schlegel, Clement, Jordan, Kayla, Gould, Phillip, Kelly, Paul, Korda, Rosemary
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:AimTo quantify the impact of the pandemic on fatal burden of disease among those living in residential aged care homes (RACH) in Australia. MethodsUsing Residential Aged Care data linked to Death Registrations (Jan 2016 to 11 Aug 2022), we estimated years of life lost per person-year (YLL/py) among people living in RACH. Additional linkage of notifications data from the state of Victoria enabled comparisons of average survival times between notified COVID-19 cases and matched non-cases living in RACH using COVID-19. ResultsCOVID-19 deaths were low in 2020 and 2021 (610 and 260 deaths, respectively) but increased in 2022 (3230 deaths). Years of life lost due to COVID-19 was low in 2020 and 2021 (1.2% and 0.5% of the total YLL/py, respectively) but increased substantially in 2022 (8.3% of the total YLL/py). However, there was little evidence that YLLs/py overall increased in the pandemic (range: 0.87 to 0.93 in 2016-2019 and 0.85 to 0.88 in 2020-2022). Results describing differences in survival between notified COVID-19 cases and non-cases are forthcoming. ConclusionWe observed no substantial increase in overall fatal burden of disease among the RACH population during the pandemic period. While COVID-19 case numbers increased in 2022 relative to 2020-2021, this was offset with better survival among cases over time, reflecting, at least in part, decreasing disease severity, high uptake of COVID-19 vaccines and antiviral medications.
ISSN:2399-4908
2399-4908
DOI:10.23889/ijpds.v9i5.2691