Author:
Senthinathan A.,Tu K.,Stephenson E.,O’Neill B.,Lipscombe L.,Ji C.,Butt D. A.,Apajee J.,Train A.,Crampton N.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the large uptake in virtual care in primary care in Canada, the care of patients with type 2 diabetes has been greatly affected. This includes decreased in-person visits, laboratory testing and in-person assessments such as blood pressure (BP). No studies have investigated if these changes persisted with pandemic progression, and it is unclear if shifts impacted patient groups uniformly. The purpose of this paper was to examine changes in diabetes care pre, early, and later pandemic across different patient groups.
Methods
A repeated cross-sectional design with an open cohort was used to investigate diabetes care in adults with type 2 diabetes for a 6-month interval from March 14 to September 13 over three consecutive years: 2019 (pre-pandemic period), 2020 (early pandemic period), and 2021 (later pandemic period). Data for this study were abstracted from the University of Toronto Practice-Based Research Network (UTOPIAN) Data Safe Haven, a primary care electronic medical records database in Ontario, Canada. Changes in diabetes care, which included primary care total visits, in-person visits, hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) testing, and BP measurements were evaluated across the phases of the pandemic. Difference in diabetes care across patient groups, including age, sex, income quintile, prior HbA1c levels, and prior BP levels, were assessed.
Results
A total of 39,401 adults with type 2 diabetes were included in the study. Compared to the 6-month pre-pandemic period, having any in-person visits decreased significantly early pandemic (OR = 0.079 (0.076–0.082)), with a partial recovery later pandemic (OR = 0.162 (95% CI: 0.157–0.169). Compared to the pre-pandemic period, there was a significant decrease early pandemic for total visits (OR = 0.486 (95% CI: 0.470–0.503)), HbA1c testing (OR = 0.401 (95% CI: 0.389–0.413)), and BP measurement (OR = 0.121 (95% CI: 0.116–0.125)), with partial recovery later pandemic.
Conclusions
All measures of diabetes care were substantially decreased early pandemic, with a partial recovery later pandemic across all patient groups. With the increase in virtual care due to the COVID-19 pandemic, diabetes care has been negatively impacted over 1-year after pandemic onset.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference25 articles.
1. World Health Organization. World Health Organization Director-General’s opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19–11. March 2020. https://www.who.int/dg/speeches/detail/who-director-general-s-opening-remarks-atthe-media-briefing-on-covid-19–11-march-2020. Accessed April 22, 2020.
2. Stephenson E, Butt DA, Gronsbell J, Ji C, Neill B, Crampton N et al. C Leong editor 2021 Changes in the top 25 reasons for primary care visits during the COVID-19 pandemic in a high-COVID region of Canada. PLoS ONE 16 8 e0255992.
3. Lim J, Broughan J, Crowley D, O’Kelly B, Fawsitt R, Burke MC, et al. COVID-19’s impact on primary care and related mitigation strategies: a scoping review. Eur J Gen Pract. 2021;27(1):166–75.
4. Carr MJ, Wright AK, Leelarathna L, Thabit H, Milne N, Kanumilli N, et al. Impact of COVID-19 on diagnoses, monitoring, and mortality in people with type 2 diabetes in the UK. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2021;9(7):413–5.
5. Moin JS, Troke N, Plumptre L, Anderson GM. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Diabetes Care for adults with type 2 diabetes in Ontario, Canada. Can J Diabetes. 2022;S1499267122000946.