Original Research

Alcohol-Related Hospitalizations During the Initial COVID-19 Lockdown in Massachusetts: An Interrupted Time-Series Analysis

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References

Limitations

In this study, hospitalizations under observation status were excluded, which could underestimate the total number of hospitalizations related to alcohol. We reasoned that this effect was likely to be small and not substantially different by year. ICD-10 codes were used to identify alcohol-related hospitalizations as any hospitalization with an included ICD-10 code listed as the primary discharge diagnosis code. This also likely underestimated the total number of alcohol-related hospitalizations. An ICD-10 code for COVID-19 was not in widespread use during our study period, which prohibited controlling explicitly for the volume of admissions due to COVID-19. The prelockdown period only contains data from the preceding 3 years, which might not be long enough for secular trends to become apparent. We assumed the population at risk remained constant when in reality, the net movement of patients into and out of VA care during the pandemic likely was more complex but not readily quantifiable. Nonetheless, the large drop in absolute number of alcohol-related hospitalizations is not likely to be sensitive to this change. In the absence of an objective measure of care-seeking behavior, we used the total daily number of hospitalizations as a surrogate for patient propensity to seek care. The total daily number of hospitalizations also reflects changes in physician admitting behavior over time. This allowed explicit modeling of care-seeking behavior as a covariate but does not capture other important determinants such as hospital capacity.

Conclusions

In this interrupted time-series analysis, the daily number of alcohol-related hospitalizations during the initial COVID-19 pandemic–associated lockdown period at VABHS decreased by 80% and remained 28% lower in the postlockdown period compared with the prepandemic baseline. In the context of evidence suggesting that alcohol-related mortality increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, alternate strategies to reach vulnerable individuals are needed. Because of high rates of relapse, hospitalization is an important opportunity to engage patients experiencing alcohol use disorder in treatment through referral to substance use treatment programs and medication-assisted therapy. Considering the reduction in alcohol-related hospitalizations during lockdown, other strategies are needed to ensure comprehensive and longitudinal care for this vulnerable population.

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