Respiratory Illness-related Emergency Visits Among Children, COVID-19 and Beyond: Observing a Return to Seasonal Patterns?
Mamata V. Kene, Madeline J. Somers, Dustin W. Ballard, Dana R. Sax, Mary E. Reed, Tara L. Greenhow

TL;DR
The study tracks how emergency visits for respiratory illnesses in children changed during and after the pandemic, finding a return to seasonal patterns with notable peaks in late 2022.
Contribution
The study provides insights into the seasonal rebound of pediatric respiratory illness ED visits post-pandemic and highlights implications for healthcare planning.
Findings
ED visits for pediatric respiratory illness dropped sharply during the pandemic but rebounded post-vaccine, showing seasonal patterns.
Upper respiratory infections, asthma, and cough were the top three diagnoses across all periods.
Late 2022 saw unseasonably high ED visits, indicating a possible surge in respiratory illnesses post-pandemic.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted care-seeking and respiratory disease epidemiology across healthcare settings, notably for emergency department (ED) care. The scope of this disruption and whether patterns of ED visits have returned to predictable seasonal patterns is of interest in planning ED staffing and resource availability for future illness surges, pandemic or not. We evaluated ED visits for acute respiratory illness among children in a large, integrated healthcare delivery system to describe illness and patient characteristics in the years before, during, and after the pandemic peak. We conducted a cross-sectional study of ED visits among patients 0–17 years of age to the 21 EDs of Kaiser Permanente Northern California, from January 1, 2018–December 31, 2019, pre-pandemic; January 1, 2020–December 31, 2021, pandemic; and January 1, 2022–March 31, 2024, post-vaccine (vaccines for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · COVID-19 and healthcare impacts
