A longitudinal cohort study on the use of health and care services by older adults living at home with/without dementia before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: the HUNT study
Tanja Louise Ibsen, Bjørn Heine Strand, Sverre Bergh, Gill Livingston, Hilde Lurås, Svenn-Erik Mamelund, Richard Oude Voshaar, Anne Marie Mork Rokstad, Pernille Thingstad, Debby Gerritsen, Geir Selbæk

TL;DR
This study examined how older adults with and without dementia used health services before and during the pandemic, finding reduced use during lockdowns that returned to normal within a year.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into how age and dementia status influenced health service use during the early pandemic period.
Findings
Older adults reduced use of health services during lockdowns, except for general practitioner contacts.
People with dementia showed a more pronounced reduction in primary care service use compared to those without dementia.
Service use returned to pre-pandemic levels within one year after the lockdown.
Abstract
Older adults and people with dementia were anticipated to be particularly unable to use health and care services during the lockdown period following the COVID-19 pandemic. To better prepare for future pandemics, we aimed to investigate whether the use of health and care services changed during the pandemic and whether those at older ages and/or dementia experienced a higher degree of change than that observed by their counterparts. Data from the Norwegian Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT4 70 + , 2017–2019) were linked to two national health registries that have individual-level data on the use of primary and specialist health and care services. A multilevel mixed-effects linear regression model was used to calculate changes in the use of services from 18 months before the lockdown, (12 March 2020) to 18 months after the lockdown. The study sample included 10,607 participants, 54% were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinance, Taxation, and Governance · Human Rights and Immigration · Administrative Law and Governance
