Multicenter Study of the Impact of COVID-19 Shelter-In-Place on Tertiary Hospital-based Care for Pediatric Neurologic Disease

Objective To describe changes in hospital-based care for children with neurologic diagnoses during the initial 6 weeks following regional Coronavirus 2019 Shelter-in-Place orders. Methods This retrospective cross-sectional study of 7 US and Canadian pediatric tertiary care institutions included emer...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurohospitalist 2022-04, Vol.12 (2), p.218-226
Hauptverfasser: Hutchinson, Melissa L., Nash, Kendall B., Abend, Nicholas S., Moharir, Mahendranath, Wells, Elizabeth, Messer, Ricka D., Palaganas, Jamie, Helbig, Ingo, Wietstock, Sharon O., Suslovic, William, Gonzalez, Alexander K., Kaufman, Michael C., Press, Craig A., Piantino, Juan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective To describe changes in hospital-based care for children with neurologic diagnoses during the initial 6 weeks following regional Coronavirus 2019 Shelter-in-Place orders. Methods This retrospective cross-sectional study of 7 US and Canadian pediatric tertiary care institutions included emergency and inpatient encounters with a neurologic primary discharge diagnosis code in the initial 6 weeks of Shelter-in-Place (COVID-SiP), compared to the same period during the prior 3 years (Pre-COVID). Patient demographics, encounter length, and neuroimaging and electroencephalography use were extracted from the medical record. Results 27,900 encounters over 4 years were included. Compared to Pre-COVID, there was a 54% reduction in encounters during Shelter-in-Place. COVID-SiP patients were younger (median 5 years vs 7 years). The incidence of encounters for migraine fell by 72%, and encounters for acute diagnoses of status epilepticus, infantile spasms, and traumatic brain injury dropped by 53%, 55%, and 56%, respectively. There was an increase in hospital length of stay, relative utilization of intensive care, and diagnostic testing (long-term electroencephalography, brain MRI, and head CT (all P
ISSN:1941-8744
1941-8752
DOI:10.1177/19418744211063075