PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Hospital admissions during Covid-19 lock-down in Germany: Differences in discretionary and unavoidable cardiovascular events.

  • Elisabeth Stöhr,
  • Adem Aksoy,
  • Meghan Campbell,
  • Muntadher Al Zaidi,
  • Can Öztürk,
  • Julia Vorloeper,
  • Jonas Lange,
  • Atsushi Sugiura,
  • Nihal Wilde,
  • Marc Ulrich Becher,
  • Christian Diepenseifen,
  • Ulrich Heister,
  • Georg Nickenig,
  • Sebastian Zimmer,
  • Vedat Tiyerili

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242653
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 11
p. e0242653

Abstract

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BackgroundA decline in hospitalization for cardiovascular events and catheter laboratory activation was reported for the United States and Italy during the initial stage of the Covid-19 pandemic of 2020. We report on the deployment of emergency services for cardiovascular events in a defined region in western Germany during the government-imposed lock-down period.MethodsWe examined 5799 consecutive patients who were treated by emergency services for cardiovascular events during the Covid-19 pandemic (January 1 to April 30, 2020), and compared those to the corresponding time frame in 2019. Examining the emergency physicians' records provided by nine locations in the area, we found a 20% overall decline in cardiovascular admissions.ResultsThe greatest reduction could be seen immediately following the government-imposed social restrictions. This reduction was mainly driven by a reduction in discretionary admissions for dizziness/syncope (-53%), heart failure (-38%), exacerbated COPD (-28%) and unstable angina (-23%), while unavoidable admissions for ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and stroke were unchanged. There was a greater decline in emergency admissions for patients ≥60 years. There was also a greater reduction in emergency admissions for those living in urban areas compared to suburban areas.ConclusionsDuring the Covid-19 pandemic, a significant decline in hospitalization for cardiovascular events was observed during the government-enforced shutdown in a predefined area in western Germany. This reduction in admissions was mainly driven by "discretionary" cardiovascular events (unstable angina, heart failure, exacerbated COPD and dizziness/syncope), but events in which admission was unavoidable (CPR, STEMI and stroke) did not change.