학술논문

Use of Acute Mental Health Care in U.S. Children’s Hospitals Before and After Statewide COVID-19 School Closure Orders
Document Type
article
Source
Psychiatric Services. 73(11)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Health Sciences
Behavioral and Social Science
Health Services
Clinical Research
Pediatric
Depression
Mental Health
Prevention
Brain Disorders
Suicide
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Child
Humans
COVID-19
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Pediatric
Schools
Patient Care
Mental Health Services
United States
Communicable Disease Control
Facilities and Services Utilization
Adolescent suicide
Child mental health
Emergency psychiatry
Public Health and Health Services
Psychiatry
Clinical sciences
Health services and systems
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine changes in child emergency department (ED) discharges and hospitalizations for primary general medical (GM) and primary psychiatric disorders; prevalence of psychiatric disorders among acute care encounters; and change in acute mental health (MH) care encounters by disorder type and, within these categories, by child sociodemographic characteristics before and after statewide COVID-19–related school closure orders.MethodsThis retrospective, cross-sectional cohort study used the Pediatric Health Information System database to assess percent changes in ED discharges and hospitalizations (N=2,658,474 total encounters) among children ages 3–17 years in 44 U.S. children’s hospitals in 2020 compared with 2019, by using matched data for 36- and 12-calendar-week intervals.ResultsDecline in MH ED discharges accounted for about half of the decline in ED discharges and hospitalizations for primary GM disorders (−24.8% vs. −49.1%), and MH hospitalizations declined 3.4 times less (−8.0% vs. −26.8%) in 2020. Suicide attempt or self-injury and depressive disorders accounted for >50% of acute MH care encounters before and after the statewide school closures. The increase in both ED discharges and hospitalizations for suicide attempt or self-injury was 5.1 percentage points (p