TY - JOUR AU - Wright, F Lucy AU - Cheema, Kate AU - Goldacre, Raph AU - Hall, Nick AU - Herz, Naomi AU - Islam, Nazrul AU - Karim, Zainab AU - Moreno-Martos, David AU - Morales, Daniel R. AU - O’Connell, Daniel AU - Spata, Enti AU - Akbari, Ashley AU - Ashworth, Mark AU - Barber, Mark AU - Briffa, Norman AU - Canoy, Dexter AU - Denaxas, Spiros AU - Khunti, Kamlesh AU - Kurdi, Amanj AU - Mamas, Mamas A. AU - Priedon, Rouven AU - Sudlow, Cathie L.M. AU - Morris, Eva JA AU - Lacey, Ben AU - Banerjee, Amitava PY - 2022 DA - November TI - Indirect effects of the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic on secondary care for cardiovascular disease in the UK: an electronic health record analysis across three countries JO - European Heart Journal - Quality of Care and Clinical Outcomes DO - https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.13.22281031 AB - Background Although morbidity and mortality from COVID-19 have been widely reported, the indirect effects of the pandemic beyond 2020 on other major diseases and health service activity have not been well described. Methods Analyses used national administrative electronic hospital records in England, Scotland and Wales for 2016-2021. Admissions and procedures during the pandemic (2020-2021) related to six major cardiovascular conditions (acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, peripheral arterial disease, aortic aneurysm, and venous thromboembolism) were compared to the annual average in the pre-pandemic period (2016-2019). Differences were assessed by time period and urgency of care. Results In 2020, there were 31,064 (-6%) fewer hospital admissions (14,506 [-4%] fewer emergencies, 16,560 [-23%] fewer elective admissions) compared to 2016-2019 for the six major cardiovascular diseases combined. The proportional reduction in admissions was similar in all three countries. Overall, hospital admissions returned to pre-pandemic levels in 2021. Elective admissions remained substantially below expected levels for almost all conditions in all three countries (-10,996 [-15%] fewer admissions). However, these reductions were offset by higher than expected total emergency admissions (+25,878 [+6%] higher admissions), notably for heart failure and stroke in England, and for venous thromboembolism in all three countries. Analyses for procedures showed similar temporal variations to admissions. Conclusion This study highlights increasing emergency cardiovascular admissions as a result of the pandemic, in the context of a substantial and sustained reduction in elective admissions and procedures. This is likely to increase further the demands on cardiovascular services over the coming years. PB - Oxford University Press UR - https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/83209/ KW - Coronavirus (COVID-19) KW - Digital health and technology ER