Substance use disorders (SUDs). Presentations to CPEP by patients with SUDs surged, but the patient profile changed, undoubtedly influenced by the pandemic. Requests for detoxification became less frequent because people who were not in severe distress avoided the hospital. At the same time, alcohol-dependent individuals who might typically avoid clinical attention were requiring emergent medical attention for delirium. This is attributable to a combination of factors, including nutritional depletion, and a lack of access to alcohol leading to abrupt withdrawal or consumption of unconventional sources of alcohol, such as hand sanitizer, or hard liquor (over beer). Amphetamine use appears to have increased, although the observed surge may simply be related to the conspicuousness of stimulant intoxication for someone who is sheltering in place. There was a noticeable uptick in overdoses (primarily with opioids) requiring CPEP evaluation, which was possibly related to a reduction of available beds in inpatient rehabilitation facilities as a result of social distancing rules.
Patients with chronic mental illness. Many experts anticipated an increase in hospital visits by individuals with chronic mental illness expected to decompensate as a result of reduced access to community treatment resources.2 Closing courts did not prevent remote sessions for inpatient retention and treatment over objection, but did result in the expiration of many Assisted Outpatient Treatment orders by restricting renewal hearings, which is circuitously beginning to fulfill this prediction. On the other hand, an impressive community response has managed to continue meeting the needs of most of these patients. Dedicated mental health clinics have recruited mobile teams or developed carefully scheduled, nursing-run “shot clinics” to ensure that patients who require long-acting injectable medications or medication-assisted treatment for SUDs continue to receive treatment.
New-onset psychosis. A new population of patients with acute mania and psychosis also seems to have surfaced during this pandemic. Previously high-functioning individuals in their 30s, 40s, and 50s without a history of mental illness were presenting with new-onset psychotic symptoms. These are individuals who may have been characteristically anxious, or had a “Type A personality,” but were social and employed. The cause is unclear, but given the extreme uncertainty and the political climate COVID-19 brings, it is possible that the pandemic may have triggered these episodes. These individuals and their families now have the stress of learning to navigate the mental health system added to the anxiety COVID-19 brings to most households.
Homelessness. Limitations on occupancy have reduced the availability of beds in shelters and residences, resulting in increased homelessness. Locally, authorities estimated that the homeless population has grown nearly threefold as a result of bussing in from neighboring counties with fewer resources, flight from New York City, and the urgent release from jail of nonviolent offenders, many of whom had no place to go for shelter. New emergency shelter beds have not fully compensated for the relative shortage, leading individuals who had been avoiding the hospital due to fear of infection to CPEP looking for a place to stay.
Home stressors. Whereas CPEP visits by children initially decreased, after 6 weeks, the relief from school pressures appears to have been replaced by weariness from stresses at home, and the number of children presenting with depression, SUDs, and behavioral disruptions has increased. Domestic violence involving children and adults increased. Factors that might be contributing to this include the forced proximity of family members who would typically need intermittent interpersonal distance, and an obligation to care for children who would normally be in school or for disabled loved ones now unable to attend day programs or respite services. After months of enduring the pressure of these conflicts and the resulting emotional strain, patient volumes in CPEP have begun slowly returning toward the expected average, particularly since the perceived threat of coming to the hospital has attenuated.
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