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KMID : 1037620220090010029
Pediatric Emergency Medicine Journal
2022 Volume.9 No. 1 p.29 ~ p.34
Coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic-related change in children¡¯s visits to the emergency department
Kang Dae-Ho

Abstract
Purpose: This study was performed to investigate the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic-related changes in visiting pattern of an emergency department (ED).

Methods: The author investigated all children younger than 19 years who visited the ED from 2018 through 2020 without exclusion criteria. Pandemic period was defined as 2020. Variables of interest were monthly and annual numbers of visits, age and age groups (< 1, 1-4, 5-9, 10-14, and 15-18 years), sex, visits for diseases, disposition, high acuity, and top 5 chief complaints per each age group. Timing of social distancing and influenza-related visits were additionally analyzed to speculate the impact of such variables on the visiting patterns.

Results: The annual visits were 11,435 (2018), 10,741 (2019), and 5,626 (2020), with a 47.6%-50.8% pandemic-related decrease. Trauma-related visits increased from 27.7%-28.4% to 36.5% (P < 0.001). In the children aged 9 years or younger, trauma as a chief complaint increased from 22.2%-29.6% to 36.2%-42.5% while fever decreased from 27.7%-47.3% to 16.7%-42.6%. In the pre-pandemic period, visits increased in February-March and October-December with a sharp increase in influenza-related visits in the latter 3 months. During the pandemic, a sharp decline in the visits was noted in January- February without the above-mentioned increasing patterns in neither total nor influenza-related visits. After the social distancing was implemented in the 13th week of 2020, the visits remained steady until a slight increase was noted after the school opening.

Conclusion: During the pandemic period, a decrease was noted in the numbers of visits to the ED, along with decreases in fever as a chief complaint in young children and influenza-related visits, and the mitigation of social distancing. These findings could be useful in preparing emergency medicine resources for ongoing and future pandemics.
KEYWORD
Coronavirus, Pandemics, Pediatrics, Health Resources, Hospital Emergency Service
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