Impact of COVID-19 outbreak on stroke admission in Thailand: a quasi-experimental, ecological study on national database.
Kannikar KongbunkiatDonlagon JumparwayNisa VorasootNarongrit KasemsapKittisak SawanyawisuthSomsak TiamkaoPublished in: Infection ecology & epidemiology (2023)
This study aimed to evaluate the effect of COVID-19 outbreak on stroke admission by using a national database. A quasi-experimental, ecological study using the national database of Thailand was conducted. The study period was between January 2017 and August 2020 before and after COVID-19 outbreak starting from March 2020. Numbers of stroke admission were evaluated before and after the COVID-19 outbreak by an interrupted time series analysis for both pre- and post-COIVD-19 outbreak. There were 381,891 patients admitted throughout Thailand. Of those, 292,382 patients (76.56%) were admitted due to thrombotic stroke followed by hemorrhagic stroke (73,130 patients; 19.15%) and embolic stroke (16,379 patients; 4.29%). During pre-COVID-19 outbreak, all stroke subtypes had an increasing trend with a coefficient of 0.076 ( p value < 0.001) for thrombotic stroke, 0.003 ( p value < 0.001) for embolic stroke and 0.012 ( p value = 0.025) for hemorrhagic stroke. The COVID-19 outbreak had significantly effect on reductions of incidence rates of thrombotic and hemorrhagic stroke with a coefficient of -2.412 ( p value < 0.001) and -0.803 ( p value = 0.023). The incidence rates of three stroke subtypes were increasing prior to the COVID-19 outbreak. The COVID-19 outbreak significantly impacts hospital admission rates of both thrombotic and hemorrhagic stroke subtypes.