| Literature DB >> 33180751 |
Rebecca T Leeb, Rebecca H Bitsko, Lakshmi Radhakrishnan, Pedro Martinez, Rashid Njai, Kristin M Holland.
Abstract
Published reports suggest that the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a negative effect on children's mental health (1,2). Emergency departments (EDs) are often the first point of care for children experiencing mental health emergencies, particularly when other services are inaccessible or unavailable (3). During March 29-April 25, 2020, when widespread shelter-in-place orders were in effect, ED visits for persons of all ages declined 42% compared with the same period in 2019; during this time, ED visits for injury and non-COVID-19-related diagnoses decreased, while ED visits for psychosocial factors increased (4). To assess changes in mental health-related ED visits among U.S. children aged <18 years, data from CDC's National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP) from January 1 through October 17, 2020, were compared with those collected during the same period in 2019. During weeks 1-11 (January 1-March 15, 2020), the average reported number of children's mental health-related ED visits overall was higher in 2020 than in 2019, whereas the proportion of children's mental health-related visits was similar. Beginning in week 12 (March 16) the number of mental health-related ED visits among children decreased 43% concurrent with the widespread implementation of COVID-19 mitigation measures; simultaneously, the proportion of mental health-related ED visits increased sharply beginning in mid-March 2020 (week 12) and continued into October (week 42) with increases of 24% among children aged 5-11 years and 31% among adolescents aged 12-17 years, compared with the same period in 2019. The increased proportion of children's mental health-related ED visits during March-October 2020 might be artefactually inflated as a consequence of the substantial decrease in overall ED visits during the same period and variation in the number of EDs reporting to NSSP. However, these findings provide initial insight into children's mental health in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and highlight the importance of continued monitoring of children's mental health throughout the pandemic, ensuring access to care during public health crises, and improving healthy coping strategies and resiliency among children and families.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33180751 PMCID: PMC7660659 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6945a3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURE 1Weekly number of emergency department (ED) mental health–related visits (A) and proportion of (B) children’s mental health–related ED visits per total ED visits* among children aged <18 years — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, January–October 2019 and 2020
* Proportion of mental health–related ED visits = number of ED visits for children’s mental health/total number of pediatric ED visits x 100,000.
Average number and proportions* of emergency department (ED) visits and mental health–related ED visits among children aged <18 years — National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP), United States, 2019–2020
| Surveillance period/indicators | 2019 | 2020 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group, yrs | Age group, yrs | |||||||
| All <18 | 0–4 | 5–11 | 12–17 | All <18 | 0–4 | 5–11 | 12–17 | |
|
| ||||||||
| Average weekly total ED visits | 265,863 | 110,002 | 81,133 | 74,728 | 199,782 | 78,742 | 59,660 | 61,380 |
| Average weekly mental health–related ED visits | 3,025 | 80 | 625 | 2,320 | 2,872 | 54 | 522 | 2,296 |
| Mental health–related ED visits per 100,000 visits | 1,130 | 73 | 762 | 3,084 | 1,539 | 75 | 919 | 3,863 |
|
| ||||||||
| Average weekly total ED visits | 274,736 | 118,926 | 83,924 | 71,886 | 342,740 | 143,789 | 107,049 | 91,902 |
| Average weekly mental health–related ED visits | 2,876 | 82 | 594 | 2,200 | 3,974 | 80 | 821 | 3,073 |
| Mental health–related ED visits per 100,000 visits | 1,044 | 69 | 707 | 30,45 | 1,162 | 56 | 769 | 3,333 |
| Average weekly total ED visits | 262,714 | 106,835 | 80,143 | 75,736 | 149,055 | 55,661 | 42,844 | 50,550 |
| Average weekly mental health–related ED visits | 3,078 | 79 | 635 | 2,363 | 2,481 | 45 | 416 | 2,020 |
| Mental health–related ED visits per 100,000 visits | 1,161 | 75 | 782 | 3,098 | 1,673 | 81 | 972 | 4,051 |
* Average proportion of ED visits for children’s mental health = (average number of ED visits for children’s mental health/average total number of ED visits for the same age or sex population [e.g., children aged 18 years]) x 100,000. All numbers have been rounded to the nearest whole number.
† Mental health–related ED visits were defined using NSSP’s Syndrome Definition (SD) Subcommittee community-developed syndrome definition for mental health conditions likely to increase in ED frequency during and after natural or human-caused disaster events. This syndrome definition attempts to leverage only mental health conditions and presentations that showed increases in visit frequency after select disasters in the United States. There are no disaster-related terms inherent to this query. The query has been added to NSSP BioSense Platform Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics as a Chief Complaint and Discharge Diagnosis category. https://knowledgerepository.syndromicsurveillance.org/disaster-related-mental-health-v1-syndrome-definition-subcommittee.
§ Weeks 1–42 in 2019 correspond to December 30, 2018–October 19, 2019; weeks 1–42 in 2020 correspond to December 29, 2019–October 17, 2020.
¶ Weeks 1–11 in 2019 correspond to December 30, 2018–March 16, 2019; weeks 1–11 in 2020 correspond to December 29, 2019–March 14, 2020.
** Weeks 12–42 in 2019 correspond to March 17–October 19, 2019; weeks 12–42 in 2020 correspond to March 15–October 17, 2020.
FIGURE 2Weekly proportion of mental health–related emergency department (ED) visits* per total ED visits among children aged <18 years, by age group — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, January–October 2019 and 2020
* Proportion of mental health–related ED visits = number of ED visits for children’s mental health/total number of pediatric ED visits x 100,000.