AI Article Synopsis

  • Lower respiratory tract infections primarily affect children and lead to many hospital admissions, with COVID-19 stay-at-home orders significantly reducing these admissions.
  • Researchers in San Diego County utilized this period to analyze pediatric emergency department visits for respiratory issues, examining 72,333 cases and fine-scale changes in air quality.
  • The study revealed a 4% reduction in pediatric respiratory visits was linked to improved air quality during the stay-at-home order, highlighting spatial disparities in health outcomes across different ZIP codes.

Article Abstract

Lower respiratory tract infections disproportionately affect children and are one of the main causes of hospital referral and admission. COVID-19 stay-at-home orders in early 2020 led to substantial reductions in hospital admissions, but the specific contribution of changes in air quality through this natural experiment has not been examined. Capitalizing on the timing of the stay-at-home order, we quantified the specific contribution of fine-scale changes in PM concentrations to reduced respiratory emergency department (ED) visits in the pediatric population of San Diego County, California. We analyzed data on pediatric ED visits ( = 72,333) at the ZIP-code level for respiratory complaints obtained from the ED at Rady Children's Hospital in San Diego County (2015-2020) and ZIP-code level PM from an ensemble model integrating multiple machine learning algorithms. We examined the decrease in respiratory visits in the pediatric population attributable to the stay-at-home order and quantified the contribution of changes in PM exposure using mediation analysis (inverse of odds ratio weighting). Pediatric respiratory ED visits dropped during the stay-at-home order (starting on 19 March 2020). Immediately after this period, PM concentrations, relative to the counterfactual values based in the 4-year baseline period, also decreased with important spatial variability across ZIP codes in San Diego County. Overall, we found that decreases in PM attributed to the stay-at-home order contributed to explain 4% of the decrease in pediatric respiratory ED visits. We identified important spatial inequalities in the decreased incidence of pediatric respiratory illness and found that brief decline in air pollution levels contributed to a decrease in respiratory ED visits.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9756275PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022GH000637DOI Listing

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