key: cord-1000938-a12ljxjx authors: Gwin, Mary; Saleki, Massoud; Lampert, Hannah; Meo, Nicholas; Bann, Maralyssa title: Emergency department visits and readmissions after COVID-19 hospitalization: a cross-sectional analysis date: 2021-02-03 journal: Intern Emerg Med DOI: 10.1007/s11739-021-02644-9 sha: 9296dd44df100a702e94b3a8b7df45cf6a7a8711 doc_id: 1000938 cord_uid: a12ljxjx nan We reviewed consecutive discharges in which patients had a laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV2 result and were discharged alive between February 28, 2020 and May 13, 2020. Patients under the age of 18 years old, pregnant patients, and those who died prior to discharge were excluded (Supplemental Fig. 1) . The primary outcome of interest (which we have termed a "revisit") is an ED encounter or rehospitalization within 30 days after discharge. Encounters for planned procedures were not counted as revisits. Trained research assistants reviewed patient records to collect patient demographics, Charlson Comorbidity Index score, and hospitalization details. Presentation at both index hospitalization and revisit was coded as "directly related to COVID-19" if documented as such in the physician notes and/or if the patient presented with symptoms and timeframe consistent with CDC guidelines [4] . Reasons for presentation not directly related to COVID-19 were also recorded. A standardized REDCap survey tool [5] was used to collect the data. Approval was provided by the University of Washington Institutional Review Board. Normally distributed variables are summarized as means with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) and comparisons between groups were made using two-sided t tests. Nonnormally distributed variables are summarized as medians with interquartile range (IQR) and comparisons between groups were made using Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Categorical variables are presented as counts with percentages and comparisons between groups were made using Fisher's exact test. Statistical significance is defined as p < 0.05. Any missing data points are noted. Data were analyzed in Stata version 15.1 (College Station, TX). Of 151 index COVID-19 discharges, 36 (24%) returned to the hospital during the study follow-up time period. The 7-day revisit rate was 11% (11 revisits to ED; 6 hospital readmissions), the 14-day revisit rate was 14% (14 revisits to ED; 7 hospital readmissions), and the 30-day revisit rate was 24% (20 revisits to ED; 16 hospital readmissions). In total, revisits occurred a median of 9 days (IQR 3.5-18.5) after discharge. These data are presented in Table 1 . Patients in this cohort averaged 59.6 years old and were predominantly male (n = 88, 58%). The most commonly represented racial/ethnic groups included White/non-Hispanic (n = 62, 41%), Hispanic/Latino (n = 37, 25%), Asian (n = 22, 15%), and Black/African American (n = 18, 12%), and the most commonly spoken primary languages were English (n = 94, 62%) and Spanish (n = 31, 21%). The median Charlson Comorbidity Index score was 3 (IQR 1-5). A total of 60 (40%) patients were diagnosed with COVID-19 a median of 5 days (IQR 3-8) prior to index hospitalization. No statistically significant difference was noted by patient characteristics or COVID-19 diagnostic details when comparing revisit versus non-revisit groups. These data are presented in Table 2 . Fewer patients were admitted at their index hospitalization for reasons directly related to COVID-19 in the revisit group as compared to the non-revisit group (53 vs 83%, p = 0.001). Patients in the revisit group had a shorter length of stay than the non-revisit group (median 4 days [IQR 2-10.5] vs 7 days [IQR 3-15], p = 0.047). Discharge location also differed by revisit vs non-revisit group (independent living/stable housing: 61 vs 67%; independent living/ unstable housing: 2 vs 9%; institutional setting: 14 vs 24%; p = 0.031). A total of 44 (29%) patients spent time in the intensive care unit at some point during hospitalization. Only 26 (17%) patients were cleared from COVID-19 and had infection precautions lifted prior to discharge. No statistically significant difference between revisit vs non-revisit groups was noted for these variables. Of all revisits, half (n = 18, 50%) were directly related to worsening COVID-19 symptoms. In both ED-only revisits and hospital readmissions, individuals presented for other medical issues not directly related to COVID-19 including fall/trauma, CVA/TIA, hematologic/oncologic issues, and non-stroke neurologic issues. Additionally, patients revisited the ED for pain, psychiatric issues, and substance use-related (intoxication/withdrawal) issues and were readmitted to the hospital for acute renal failure. This information is presented in Table 3 . In conclusion, we found that nearly a quarter of patients with COVID-19 who discharged during the study time period had a revisit (either ED encounter or rehospitalization) within 30 days of discharge. These patients had a shorter index hospital length of stay and a higher proportion of discharge to unstable housing than patients without a revisit. Our 30-day hospital readmission rate of 11% is higher than most reported comparisons both in the US (2.2% overall readmission rate in New York City [6] , 6.8% 30-day hospital readmission in Rhode Island [7] , 10.3% overall hospital readmission in Boston [8] ) and globally (2.3% overall hospital readmission in Wuhan [9] , 4.4% overall hospital readmission in Madrid [10] , 4.5% overall hospital readmission in South Korea [11] , 7.1% 30-day hospital readmission in Turkey [12] ). This could reflect the fact that some studies defined readmissions more strictly as COVID-related presentation or that some were confounded by a large number of patients remaining hospitalized during the study time period. Geographic differences, system function/capacity, and post-hospitalization follow-up and monitoring variability may also contribute. While much of the literature focuses on hospital readmission specifically, we have demonstrated that ED encounters also frequently occur after discharge. Around half of revisits in our cohort occurred in the ED, which is consistent with previous reports [13] . Several key findings from our data warrant additional attention. First, we have corroborated the finding from previous studies [10, 13] that shorter COVID-19 index hospital length of stay is associated with revisits after discharge. While the mechanism for this is not yet clear, it is possible either that there are unforeseen late-developing COVID-19 clinical changes that need to be better characterized and/or that system-level factors such as increased bed demand place strain on discharge decisions. Second, we have identified that discharge location is related to revisit rate with discharge to unstable housing over-represented in the revisit group and discharge to stable housing or an institutional setting underrepresented. This supports the call for equitable approaches to care including both structural and individual responses to housing needs [14] . Finally, we highlight that reasons for admission are heterogeneous, especially in patients with revisits. Only around half of index admissions and revisits were directly related to COVID-19 for this population, but whether these presentations are truly unrelated or represent potential longer term sequelae of infection is undetermined. As more information is learned about the COVID-19 infection, it is possible that some issues (neurologic, hematologic, etc.) may be identified as complications of the infection itself though currently we are unable to characterize these findings as such. Though this study includes a relatively small sample size, we used a time period that spans the majority of the local outbreak and thus avoided the challenge of omitting a large proportion of patients who remain hospitalized. Further, while the local health care system experienced some strain, crisis standards of care were not implemented. Thus, we believe our findings are relevant and generalizable to hospital systems that continue to face a significant but not overwhelming COVID-19 burden. We also included patients from two hospitals that share a medical record. When comparing between hospitals, we did not identify a statistically significant difference in revisits, though there were some differences identified in demographics and outcomes that may reflect the different patient populations served (Supplemental Table 1 ). Additional exploration of hospital-based or geographic-based differences in revisits is an important area of future study. In conclusion, our results indicate that patients commonly access the healthcare system after index COVID-19 discharge and do so with a variety of presenting complaints. In addition, our findings suggest that attention to social needs such as housing security may be impactful in preventing readmissions and that additional investigation to better understand the impact of index length of stay is warranted. The online version contains supplementary material available at https ://doi.org/10.1007/s1173 9-021-02644 -9. Funding No financial disclosures or funding sources to report. Conflict of interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. No direct contact with human participants or animals was performed as part of this study. The study was approved by the University of Washington Institutional Review Board (#10471) and the requirement for informed consent or HIPAA authorization was waived. First case of 2019 novel coronavirus in the United States CDC. 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