Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a substantial and lasting impact on care provision, particularly in the field of cancer care. National steering has helped monitor the health situation and adapt the provision and organisation of care. Based on data from the French administrative healthcare database (SNDS) on the entire French population (67 million people), screening, diagnostic and therapeutic activity was monitored and compared 2019 on a monthly basis. A noteworthy decline in all activities (with the exception of chemotherapy) was observed during the first lockdown in France. Over the months that followed, this activity returned to normal but did not make up for the shortfall from the first lockdown. Finally, during the lockdown in late 2020, cancer care activity was conserved. In brief, in 2020, the number of mammograms decreased by 10% (− 492,500 procedures), digestive endoscopies by 19% (− 648,500), and cancer-related excision by 6% (− 23,000 surgical procedures). Hospital radiotherapy activity was down 3.8% (− 4400 patients) and that in private practice was down 1.4% (− 1600 patients). Chemotherapy activity increased by 2.2% (7200 patients), however. To summarize, COVID-19 had a very substantial impact during the first lockdown. Safeguarding cancer care activity helped limit this impact over the months that followed, but the situation remains uncertain. Further studies on the medium- and long-term impact on individuals (survival, recurrence, after-effects) will be conducted.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has had a substantial and lasting impact on care provision, in the field of cancer care

  • Similar initiatives have been adopted in most Western countries, repositioning screening with regard to risks due to COVID-19 and in the aim of adapting the healthcare ­system[7–9]

  • The purpose of this study is to present the cancer care activity monitoring and steering scorecards, estimate the impact of the health crisis due to COVID-19, and present the measures adopted to limit their effects

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a substantial and lasting impact on care provision, in the field of cancer care. Safeguarding cancer care activity helped limit this impact over the months that followed, but the situation remains uncertain. A second lockdown took place from 28 October to 15 December 2020, which was less restrictive than the first (schools stayed open, and a limited number of businesses continued to operate) Following this lockdown, the entire country was placed under curfew. In the field of cancer care, some measures were drafted with in particular a number of guidelines and tools being issued for healthcare professionals by the French Ministry for Health and the French National Cancer Institute (INCa), ranging from adaptation of medical practices in crisis situations, to the resumption of activity, along with the prioritisation of cancer patients for ­vaccination[1–5] https://www.e-cancer.fr/Professionnels-de-sante/Coronavirus-COVID-​19). Sciences Applied To Health and Analysis of Medical Information (SESSTIM), 27 Bd Jean Moulin, 13005, Marseille, Scientific Reports | (2022) 12:4207

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