4.4 Article

Pattern of Emergency Department referral during the COVID-19 outbreak in Italy

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PANMINERVA MEDICA
卷 63, 期 4, 页码 478-481

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EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA
DOI: 10.23736/S0031-0808.20.04000-8

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Coronavirus; Emergencies; COVID-19; Emergency service; hospital

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The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically reduced the number of ED referrals in Italy, leading to an increased hospital admission rate and a shift towards higher priority codes for admissions. There has been a significant decrease in referrals for both traumatic and non-traumatic conditions, with suspected COVID-19 accounting for a large portion of non-traumatic cases.
BACKGROUND: The Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak is putting the European National Health Systems under pressure. Interestingly, Emergency Department (ED) referrals for other reasons than COVID-19 seem to have declined steeply. In the present paper, we aimed to verify how the COVID-19 outbreak changed ED referral pattern. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the clinical records of patients referred to the ED of a University Hospital in Northern Italy from 1 March to 13 April 2020. We compared the following data with those belonging to the same period in 2019: number of EDs accesses, rate of hospital admission, frequencies of the most common causes of ED referral, priority codes of access. RESULTS: The number of ED referrals during the COVID-19 outbreak was markedly reduced when compared to the same period in 2019 (3059 vs. 5691;-46.3%). Conversely, the rate of hospital admission raised from 16.9% to 35.4% (P<0.0001), with a shift toward higher priority codes of ED admission. In 2020, we observed both a reduction of the number of patients referred for both traumatic (513, 16.8% vs. 1544, 27.1%; chi(2)=118.7, P<0.0001) and non-traumatic (4147 vs. 2546) conditions. Among the latter, suspected COVID-19 accounted for 1101 (43.2%) accesses. CONCLUSIONS: The COVID-19 pandemic completely changed the pattern of ED referral in Italy, with a marked reduction of the accesses to the hospitals. This could be related to a limited exposure to traumas and to a common fear of being infected during EDs in-stay. This may limit the misuse of EDs for non-urgent conditions but may also delay proper referrals for urgent conditions.

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