| Literature DB >> 35486809 |
Gillian E Smith1,2, Sally E Harcourt1, Uy Hoang3, Agnieszka Lemanska3, Alex J Elliot1,2, Roger A Morbey1,2, Helen E Hughes1, Iain Lake2,4, Obaghe Edeghere1,2, Isabel Oliver5,6, Julian Sherlock3, Richard Amlôt2,5,7, Simon de Lusignan3,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in an unprecedented impact on the day-to-day lives of people, with several features potentially adversely affecting mental health. There is growing evidence of the size of the impact of COVID-19 on mental health, but much of this is from ongoing population surveys using validated mental health scores.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; anxiety; health care; health care service; health surveillance; mental health; pandemic; public health; sleep problems; syndromic surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35486809 PMCID: PMC9359118 DOI: 10.2196/32347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Public Health Surveill ISSN: 2369-2960
Figure 1Calls, consultations, and attendances for mental health conditions presenting to NHS 111, GP in-hours and GP out-of-hours and EDs, and GP in-hours mental health medications in comparison to selected key dates in the pandemic. (A) NHS 111 calls for mental health problems, (B) GP in-hours consultations for mental health conditions, (C) GP in-hours prescriptions for mental health medications, (D) GP out-of-hours consultations for all mental health conditions, and (E) ED attendances for mental health conditions. Daily calls/consultations/attendances/prescriptions presented as 7dma adjusted for bank holidays (BH) and by gender. The start of lockdown (March 23, 2020) and the start of the postlockdown period (June 1, 2020) are indicated by vertical lines. 7dma: 7-day moving averages; ED: emergency department; GP: general practitioner; ISO: International Organisation for Standardisation; NHS: National Health Service.
Interrupted time series analysis illustrating a comparison of modeled versus measured call, consultation, attendance, and prescription counts presenting to a number of health care systems: NHSa 111, GPb in-hours and out-of-hours consultations, ambulance services, and EDsc on the first day of lockdown (March 23, 2020).
| System and syndrome | Modeled (ie, if pandemic had not happened) number on first day of lockdown | Actual number on first day of lockdown | Estimated change on first day of lockdown (actual number – modeled number) | Percentage change (%) | |
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| Total calls | 33,104 | 37,572 | 4468 | 13 |
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| Mental health problems | 550 | 214 | 336 | –61 |
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| Sleep difficulties | 24 | 12 | 12 | –49 |
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| Mental health problems | 3155 | 2859 | 296 | –9 |
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| Mental health prescriptions | 20,639 | 26,137 | 5496 | 27 |
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| Depression | 1560 | 1421 | 139 | –9 |
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| Anxiety | 1428 | 1420 | –8 | –1 |
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| Total consultations | 20,861 | 20,628 | –233 | –1 |
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| Mental health | 87 | 76 | –11 | –12 |
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| Depression | 18 | 7 | –11 | –60 |
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| Anxiety | 49 | 51 | 2 | 4 |
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| Total syndromic calls | 14,705 | 17,156 | 2451 | 17 |
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| Overdose/ingestion/poisoning | 509 | 362 | –147 | –29 |
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| Total attendances | 23,758 | 13,191 | –10,567 | –44 |
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| Mental health | 434 | 269 | –165 | –38 |
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| Overdose | 182 | 97 | –85 | –47 |
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| Excess alcohol use | 162 | 86 | –76 | -47 |
aNHS: National Health Service.
bGP: general practitioner.
cED: emergency department.
Figure 2Summary of changes in syndromic indicators for the postlockdown period across systems compared to that expected. GP: general practitioner; NHS: National Health Service.
Interrupted time series analysis illustrating a comparison of modeled versus measured call, consultation, attendance, and prescription counts presenting to a number of health care systems: NHSa 111, GPb in-hours and out-of-hours consultations, ambulance services, and EDsc during the postlockdown period (June 1-September 30, 2020).
| System and syndrome | Modeled (ie, if pandemic had not happened) daily mean number in postlockdown period, estimate (95% CI) | Actual daily mean number in postlockdown period | Estimated difference due to pandemic in daily mean postlockdown period, estimate (95% CI) | Percentage change (%) | |
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| Total calls | 37,606 (35,553-39,532) | 43,071 | 5465 (4653-6295) | 15 |
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| Mental health problems | 599 (585-613) | 661 | 62 (51-73) | 10 |
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| Sleep difficulties | 27 (26-28) | 34 | 7 (5-8) | 25 |
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| Mental health problems | 2178 (1963-2414) | 1903 | –275 (–317 to –232) | –13 |
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| Mental health prescriptions | 14,592 (13,093-16,197) | 12722 | –1870 (–2342 to –1392) | –13 |
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| Depression | 1090 (978-1210) | 887 | –202 (–229 to –176) | –19 |
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| Anxiety | 1022 (920-1134) | 878 | –144 (–166 to –122) | –14 |
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| Total consultations | 24,444 (23,149-25,634) | 23,391 | –1053 (–1562 to –512) | –4 |
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| Mental health | 109 (101-116) | 132 | 23 (19-27) | 21 |
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| Depression | 20 (18-21) | 22 | 3 (2-4) | 13 |
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| Anxiety | 62 (58-66) | 71 | 10 (7-12) | 15 |
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| Total syndromic calls | 14,883 (14,827-14,938) | 13,842 | –1041 (–1194 to –889) | –7 |
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| Overdose/ ingestion/ poisoning | 571 (566-577) | 535 | –37 (–45 to –28) | –6 |
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| Total attendances | 23,865 (23,776-23,959) | 19,925 | –3940 (–4201 to –3681) | –17 |
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| Mental health | 428 (426-431) | 433 | 5 (–1 to 11) | 1 |
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| Overdose | 179 (178-180) | 188 | 9 (6-12) | 5 |
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| Excess alcohol use | 198 (192-205) | 186 | –13 (–17 to –8) | –6 |
aNHS: National Health Service.
bGP: general practitioner.
cED: emergency department.
Figure 3Consultations for depression and anxiety presenting to GP in-hours and out-of-hours in comparison to selected key dates in the pandemic. (A) GP in-hours consultations for depression, (B) GP out-of-hours consultations for depression, (C) GP in-hours consultations for anxiety, and (D) GP out-of-hours consultations for anxiety. Daily consultations presented as 7dma adjusted for bank holidays (BH) and by gender. The start of the lockdown (March 23, 2020) and the start of the postlockdown period (June 1, 2020) are indicated by vertical lines. 7dma: 7-day moving averages; GP: general practitioner; ISO: International Organisation for Standardisation.
Figure 4Calls to NHS 111 for sleep difficulties in comparison to selected key dates in the pandemic. Daily numbers of calls presented as bank holiday (BH)-adjusted 7dma and by gender. The start of the lockdown (March 23, 2020) and the start of the postlockdown period (June 1, 2020) are indicated by vertical lines. 7dma: 7-day moving averages; ISO: International Organisation for Standardisation; NHS: National Health Service.
Figure 5Ambulance calls and ED attendances for indicators of self-harm (overdose and excess alcohol use) in comparison to selected key dates in the pandemic. (A) Ambulance calls for overdose, (B) ED attendances for overdose, and (C) ED attendances for excess alcohol use. Daily numbers of call-outs/attendances presented as bank holiday (BH)-adjusted 7dma and by gender (ED only). The start of lockdown (March 23, 2020) and the start of the postlockdown period (June 1, 2020) are indicated by vertical lines. 7dma: 7-day moving averages; ED: emergency department; ISO: International Organisation for Standardisation.