Trends in inequalities in avoidable hospitalisations across the COVID-19 pandemic: a cohort study of 23.5 million people in England

Author:

Green Mark AlanORCID,McKee MartinORCID,Massey JonORCID,Mackenna Brian,Mehrkar Amir,Bacon Seb,Macleod John,Sheikh Aziz,Shah Syed AhmarORCID,Katikireddi Srinivasa VittalORCID, ,

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine whether periods of disruption were associated with increased ‘avoidable’ hospital admissions and wider social inequalities in England.DesignObservational repeated cross-sectional study.SettingEngland (January 2019 to March 2022).ParticipantsWith the approval of NHS England we used individual-level electronic health records from OpenSAFELY, which covered ~40% of general practices in England (mean monthly population size 23.5 million people).Primary and secondary outcome measuresWe estimated crude and directly age-standardised rates for potentially preventable unplanned hospital admissions: ambulatory care sensitive conditions and urgent emergency sensitive conditions. We considered how trends in these outcomes varied by three measures of social and spatial inequality: neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation, ethnicity and geographical region.ResultsThere were large declines in avoidable hospitalisations during the first national lockdown (March to May 2020). Trends increased post-lockdown but never reached 2019 levels. The exception to these trends was for vaccine-preventable ambulatory care sensitive admissions which remained low throughout 2020–2021. While trends were consistent by each measure of inequality, absolute levels of inequalities narrowed across levels of neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation, Asian ethnicity (compared with white ethnicity) and geographical region (especially in northern regions).ConclusionsWe found no evidence that periods of healthcare disruption from the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in more avoidable hospitalisations. Falling avoidable hospital admissions has coincided with declining inequalities most strongly by level of deprivation, but also for Asian ethnic groups and northern regions of England.

Funder

Scottish Government Chief Scientist Office

NHS Research Scotland

Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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