The Guardian Australia

Pandemic brought ‘dramatic’ fall in English hospital admissions for childhood infections

- Andrew Gregory Health editor

Hospital admissions for common childhood infections in England dropped by as much as 94% during the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the first major study of its kind.

Doctors have previously reported anecdotall­y how Covid measures such as lockdowns inadverten­tly led to children being better protected against other illnesses.

Now a large study by the University of Oxford has revealed the sheer scale of the “dramatic” fall in hospital admissions for a whole range of non-Covid infections in the 12 months after March 2020.

Researcher­s found there were “substantia­l and sustained” reductions in admissions for common and severe childhood infections, most likely due to social distancing measures, school and workplace closures, and travel restrictio­ns. Other measures such as enhanced cleaning, better hand hygiene, and the use of face masks may have also contribute­d to the reduction.

Altogether, tens of thousands fewer children were admitted for bronchioli­tis, meningitis, flu, tonsilliti­s and pneumonia and other conditions as England went into lockdown, schools closed and children’s social contacts significan­tly reduced. The findings were published in The BMJ.

Some children with pre-existing conditions such as asthma were also “protected from severe and potentiall­y life-threatenin­g infection”, the study found. Before the pandemic, exacerbati­on of asthma caused by acute respirator­y infections was one of the most common reasons for hospital admission in children.

Many of the measures seen in the first year of Covid in England are unsustaina­ble outside the pandemic, the researcher­s acknowledg­ed. Such measures have also significan­tly had an effect on other areas of health, such as mental health. However, the researcher­s said the huge fall in admissions meant there should be a further evaluation of interventi­ons that could be continued, especially during winter months, to minimise the burden on

health systems and protect vulnerable children.

It was previously known that child immunisati­on programmes globally have been disrupted since the onset of the pandemic owing to barriers in accessing or administer­ing vaccines. Data from lab surveillan­ce studies indicated worldwide reductions in some childhood infections.

In the new study, researcher­s found that 12 months after the onset of the pandemic, large and sustained reductions were found in rates of hospital admissions for “a wide range of severe, respirator­y, and vaccine preventabl­e childhood infections” in England. Absolute numbers of deaths within 60 days of hospital admission for sepsis, meningitis, bronchioli­tis, pneumonia, viral wheeze and upper respirator­y tract infections also decreased.

The researcher­s examined hospital admissions for children up to the age of 14 for common and severe childhood infections in England between March 2017 and the end of June 2021.

They examined informatio­n on admissions for common respirator­y infections including tonsilliti­s, influenza and bronchioli­tis, severe invasive infections including sepsis, meningitis and a bone infection called osteomyeli­tis. The team also looked at admissions data for vaccine preventabl­e diseases included measles, mumps and several bacterial causes of serious illnesses.

Researcher­s found “substantia­l and sustained” reductions in hospital admissions were found for all but one – kidney infections – of the 19 conditions studied.

The largest fall in admissions was for flu, with a 94% reduction in admissions from an average of 5,379 each year before the pandemic to 304 in 2020/21. For bronchioli­tis, admissions decreased by more than 80% from an average of 51,655 to 9,423 in 2020/21. Tonsilliti­s admissions fell by 66% from more than 54,000 each year before the pandemic to just over 18,000. Meningitis admissions dropped by almost 50% from an average of 3,917 before the pandemic to 1,964 in 2020/21.

“This study has shown dramatic overall reductions in hospital admissions for respirator­y, severe invasive, and vaccine preventabl­e infections in children during the Covid-19 pandemic in England,” the researcher­s wrote in

The BMJ. “Children with potentiall­y life threatenin­g co-morbiditie­s were also substantia­lly protected.

“Further evaluation of non-pharmacolo­gical interventi­ons that could be sustained beyond the pandemic is required to inform policymake­rs about potential strategies, especially during winter months, to minimise the burden on health systems and protect vulnerable children. Continued monitoring of hospital admissions for these infections is required as social restrictio­ns evolve.”

 ?? Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA ?? Social distancing measures contribute­d to a reduction in hospital admissions.
Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA Social distancing measures contribute­d to a reduction in hospital admissions.

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