Abstract
Background/Objective
Emergency department (ED) visits have declined while excess mortality, not attributable to COVID‐19, has grown. It is not known whether older adults are accessing emergency care differently from their younger counterparts. Our objective was to determine patterns of ED visit counts for emergent conditions during the COVID‐19 pandemic for older adults.
Design
Retrospective, observational study
Setting
Observational analysis of ED sites enrolled in a national clinical quality registry
Participants
164 ED sites in 33 states from January 1st, 2019 through November 15th, 2020.
Main outcome and measures
We measured daily ED visit counts for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stroke, sepsis, fall, and hip fracture, as well as deaths in the ED, by age categories. We estimated Poisson regression models comparing early and post‐early pandemic periods (defined by the CDC) to the pre‐pandemic period. We report incident rate ratios to summarize changes in visit incidence.
Results
For AMI, stroke, and sepsis, the older (75‐84) and oldest old (85+ years) had the greatest decline in visit counts initially and the smallest recovery in the post‐early pandemic periods. For falls, visits declined early and partially recovered uniformly across age categories. In contrast, hip fractures exhibited less change in visit rates across time periods. Deaths in the ED increased during the early pandemic period, but then fell and were persistently lower than baseline, especially for the older (75‐84) and oldest old (85+ years).
Conclusions
The decline in ED visits for emergent conditions among older adults has been more pronounced and persistent than for younger patients, with fewer deaths in the ED. This is concerning given the greater prevalence and risk of poor outcomes for emergent conditions in this age group that are amenable to time‐sensitive ED diagnosis and treatment, and may in part explain excess mortality during the COVID‐19 era among older adults.