Abstract

As the emergency department (ED) has evolved into the de-facto site of care for a variety of substance use disorder (SUD) presentations, trends in ED utilization are an essential public health surveillance tool. Changes in ED visit patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic may reflect changes in access to outpatient treatment, changes in SUD incidence, or the unintended effects of public policy to mitigate COVID-19. We use a national emergency medicine registry to describe and characterize trends in ED visitation for SUDs since 2019. We included all ED visits identified in a national emergency medicine clinical quality registry, which included 174 sites across 33 states with data from January 2019 through June 2021. We defined SUD using ED visit diagnosis codes including: opioid overdose and opioid use disorder (OUD), alcohol use disorders (AUD), and other SUD. To characterize changes in ED utilization, we plotted the 3-week moving average ratio of visit counts in 2020 and 2021 as compared to visit counts in 2019. While overall ED visits declined in the early pandemic period and had not returned to 2019 baseline by June 2021, ED visit counts for SUD demonstrated smaller declines in March and April of 2020, so that the proportion of overall ED visits that were for SUD increased. Furthermore, in the second half of 2020, ED visits for SUD returned to baseline, and increased above baseline for OUD ever since May 2020. We observe distinct patterns in ED visitation for SUDs over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly for OUD for which ED visitation barely declined and now exceeds previous baselines. These trends likely demonstrate the essential role of hospital-based EDs in providing 24/7/365 care for people with SUDs and mental health conditions. Allocation of resources must be directed towards the ED as a de-facto safety net for populations in crisis.

Highlights

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) first documented a 42% decline in emergency department (ED) visits across the United States (US) during the early COVID-19 pandemic [1]

  • In the second half of 2020, ED visits for substance use disorder (SUD) returned to baseline, and increased above baseline for opioid use disorder (OUD) ever since May 2020

  • We observe distinct patterns in ED visitation for SUDs over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, for OUD for which ED visitation barely declined and exceeds previous baselines. These trends likely demonstrate the essential role of hospital-based EDs in providing 24/7/365 care for people with SUDs and mental health conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Emergency medical services (EMS) and syndromic surveillance data has suggested an increase in opioid overdoses during the early months of the pandemic In some regions, this may reflect worsening access to substance use disorder (SUD) treatment options amidst state and local shutdowns or the psychosocial effects of COVID-19 that place people at higher risk of overdose or returning to use [3,4,5,6,7]. We use a national emergency medicine registry to describe and characterize trends in ED visitation for SUDs since 2019

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