4.3 Article

Changes in community and hospital-based health care use during the COVID-19 pandemic for adults with and without intellectual and developmental disabilities

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY RESEARCH
Volume 66, Issue 5, Pages 399-412

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jir.12929

Keywords

COVID-19; hospitalisations; intellectual and developmental disabilities; physician visits; service use

Funding

  1. ICES - Ontario Ministry of Health (MOH)
  2. Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care (MLTC)
  3. Ontario Health Data Platform (OHDP), a Province of Ontario initiative

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Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and adaptations in service delivery, the utilization of healthcare services among individuals with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities (IDD) differed from those without IDD. The study found that the proportion of adults using healthcare services decreased during the first year of the pandemic, except for virtual physician visits. However, individuals with IDD were more likely to use mental health emergency visits and hospitalizations compared to those without IDD.
Background Due to the functional, cognitive and communication impairments associated with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities (IDD), adaptations to service delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic may impact people with IDD differently than others. For community and hospital-based services, this study describes the proportion of adults with and without IDD who used health care in the year pre-COVID-19 and the first year of the pandemic. Methods This retrospective cohort study used linked health administrative databases to identify adults aged 18-105 years with and without IDD using unique encoded identifiers. Counts and proportions of adults who used health care services were reported for the pre-COVID-19 year (16 March 2019 to 14 March 2020) and the first COVID-19 year (15 March 2020 to 15 March 2021). Results Across services, the proportion of adults who used services was lower during the first COVID-19 year compared with the year prior, except for virtual physician visits that increased markedly for people with and without IDD. While the proportion of adults who used services was higher for those with IDD compared with those without IDD for both years, differences were greatest for mental health emergency visits and hospitalisations; adults with IDD were 6.3 to 10.9 times more likely to use these services than others with no IDD during the pandemic. Conclusions During the first COVID-19 year in Ontario, Canada, service use decreased for all service types, except for virtual physician visits. In both years, adults with IDD remained more likely to use services than other adults, with the largest differences in use of mental health hospitalisations and mental health emergency department visits.

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