S. Klang, S. Merling, Sigal Rosenberg, Galit Borchuk, M. Pugatch
{"title":"以色列冠状病毒大流行期间卫生资源的利用:Meuhedet卫生服务的真实数据分析和未来结论","authors":"S. Klang, S. Merling, Sigal Rosenberg, Galit Borchuk, M. Pugatch","doi":"10.2174/18749445-v16-230221-2022-163","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n \n To examine the utilization of health resources during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel through the analysis of Meuhedet Health Services’ real-world database.\n \n \n \n The history of COVID-19 in Israel comprises three waves: from February to May 2020, from May to November 2020, and from November 2020 to April 2021. Restrictions imposed on the Israeli population included travel limitations and even lockdowns. Meuhedet Health Services, the third largest health management organization in Israel, manages all its medical data through computerized electronic files and has collected various types of health services data from 2018 to 2020. This paper compares the consumption of its services between two consecutive years.\n pandemic for Meuhedet Health Services using a real-world database.\n \n \n \n Electronic medical records from primary care physicians, laboratory tests, hospitalization medical histories, treatments in hospitals and institutes, visits to and treatments by community physicians, and prescriptions and medical equipment consumption were collected from 2018 to 2020. This research used aggregated, non-personalized, and decoded data from a cohort of insured persons, and the research was approved by all the relevant institutional Helsinki Committees. The data analysis compares the corresponding data in a chosen month of a year with the data in the same month of the previous year. The differences are then scaled by the data corresponding to the month of the previous year and the result multiplied by 100 and plotted.\n To analyze drug consumption, we use the fixed price of every drug in a year multiplied by the difference in consumption of the drug in question between the month of the current year and the same month of the previous year, multiplied by 100. \n \n \n \n A significant decrease was noted in hospitalization days, general hospital outpatient clinic visits, general hospital emergency room visits, and total numbers of visits to community physicians during the first lockdown in the first wave of the pandemic in comparison to 2019. At the end of the lockdown, however, a compensatory increase was noted in all services. In terms of drug consumption, the data show no differences in the effects of the different waves. Our findings reveal that the first wave of COVID-19 was a shock, with a significant reduction in the consumption of health services, but this decrease attenuated with the second wave, due to immediate management interventions and safety rules implemented in hospitals and clinics.\n \n \n \n People shun medical services during a fast-spreading epidemic that causes significant mortality. Since new variants of COVID-19 could be part of our lives for the next few years, we should learn how to continue living with the pandemic and develop alternative medical services to maintain health states. Digitization, remote services, telemedicine, and home care, including home hospitalization, should be part of the health services to cope with pandemic situations.\n","PeriodicalId":38960,"journal":{"name":"Open Public Health Journal","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Utilization of Health Resources during the Coronavirus Pandemic in Israel: Meuhedet Health Services’ Real Data Analysis and Future Conclusions\",\"authors\":\"S. Klang, S. Merling, Sigal Rosenberg, Galit Borchuk, M. Pugatch\",\"doi\":\"10.2174/18749445-v16-230221-2022-163\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n \\n To examine the utilization of health resources during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel through the analysis of Meuhedet Health Services’ real-world database.\\n \\n \\n \\n The history of COVID-19 in Israel comprises three waves: from February to May 2020, from May to November 2020, and from November 2020 to April 2021. Restrictions imposed on the Israeli population included travel limitations and even lockdowns. Meuhedet Health Services, the third largest health management organization in Israel, manages all its medical data through computerized electronic files and has collected various types of health services data from 2018 to 2020. This paper compares the consumption of its services between two consecutive years.\\n pandemic for Meuhedet Health Services using a real-world database.\\n \\n \\n \\n Electronic medical records from primary care physicians, laboratory tests, hospitalization medical histories, treatments in hospitals and institutes, visits to and treatments by community physicians, and prescriptions and medical equipment consumption were collected from 2018 to 2020. This research used aggregated, non-personalized, and decoded data from a cohort of insured persons, and the research was approved by all the relevant institutional Helsinki Committees. The data analysis compares the corresponding data in a chosen month of a year with the data in the same month of the previous year. The differences are then scaled by the data corresponding to the month of the previous year and the result multiplied by 100 and plotted.\\n To analyze drug consumption, we use the fixed price of every drug in a year multiplied by the difference in consumption of the drug in question between the month of the current year and the same month of the previous year, multiplied by 100. \\n \\n \\n \\n A significant decrease was noted in hospitalization days, general hospital outpatient clinic visits, general hospital emergency room visits, and total numbers of visits to community physicians during the first lockdown in the first wave of the pandemic in comparison to 2019. At the end of the lockdown, however, a compensatory increase was noted in all services. In terms of drug consumption, the data show no differences in the effects of the different waves. Our findings reveal that the first wave of COVID-19 was a shock, with a significant reduction in the consumption of health services, but this decrease attenuated with the second wave, due to immediate management interventions and safety rules implemented in hospitals and clinics.\\n \\n \\n \\n People shun medical services during a fast-spreading epidemic that causes significant mortality. Since new variants of COVID-19 could be part of our lives for the next few years, we should learn how to continue living with the pandemic and develop alternative medical services to maintain health states. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
通过分析Meuhedet卫生服务的真实世界数据库,检查以色列COVID-19大流行第一年卫生资源的利用情况。2019冠状病毒病在以色列的历史包括三波:2020年2月至5月、2020年5月至11月和2020年11月至2021年4月。对以色列人口施加的限制包括旅行限制甚至封锁。Meuhedet Health Services是以色列第三大健康管理组织,通过计算机化电子文件管理其所有医疗数据,并收集了2018年至2020年各种类型的健康服务数据。本文对其连续两年的服务消费进行了比较。Meuhedet卫生服务使用真实世界的数据库。收集2018 - 2020年初级保健医生的电子病历、实验室检查、住院病史、医院和研究所的治疗情况、社区医生的就诊和治疗情况、处方和医疗设备消费情况。本研究使用了来自参保人群队列的汇总、非个性化和解码数据,该研究得到了赫尔辛基所有相关机构委员会的批准。数据分析是将一年中选定月份的相应数据与前一年同月的数据进行比较。然后用前一年对应月份的数据对差异进行缩放,并将结果乘以100绘制出来。为了分析药物消费,我们使用一年中每种药物的固定价格乘以该药物在当年当月与上一年同月之间的消费差异,再乘以100。与2019年相比,在第一波大流行的第一次封锁期间,住院天数、综合医院门诊就诊次数、综合医院急诊室就诊次数和社区医生就诊总数均显著减少。然而,在封锁结束时,所有服务部门都出现了补偿性增长。在药物消费方面,数据显示不同的波的影响没有差异。我们的研究结果表明,第一波COVID-19疫情是一种冲击,医疗服务消费大幅减少,但由于医院和诊所采取了及时的管理干预措施和安全规则,第二波疫情的减少幅度有所减弱。在造成大量死亡的快速蔓延的流行病期间,人们回避医疗服务。由于COVID-19的新变种可能在未来几年成为我们生活的一部分,我们应该学习如何继续与大流行共存,并开发替代医疗服务以保持健康状态。数字化、远程服务、远程医疗和家庭护理,包括家庭住院,应成为应对大流行情况的卫生服务的一部分。
Utilization of Health Resources during the Coronavirus Pandemic in Israel: Meuhedet Health Services’ Real Data Analysis and Future Conclusions
To examine the utilization of health resources during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel through the analysis of Meuhedet Health Services’ real-world database.
The history of COVID-19 in Israel comprises three waves: from February to May 2020, from May to November 2020, and from November 2020 to April 2021. Restrictions imposed on the Israeli population included travel limitations and even lockdowns. Meuhedet Health Services, the third largest health management organization in Israel, manages all its medical data through computerized electronic files and has collected various types of health services data from 2018 to 2020. This paper compares the consumption of its services between two consecutive years.
pandemic for Meuhedet Health Services using a real-world database.
Electronic medical records from primary care physicians, laboratory tests, hospitalization medical histories, treatments in hospitals and institutes, visits to and treatments by community physicians, and prescriptions and medical equipment consumption were collected from 2018 to 2020. This research used aggregated, non-personalized, and decoded data from a cohort of insured persons, and the research was approved by all the relevant institutional Helsinki Committees. The data analysis compares the corresponding data in a chosen month of a year with the data in the same month of the previous year. The differences are then scaled by the data corresponding to the month of the previous year and the result multiplied by 100 and plotted.
To analyze drug consumption, we use the fixed price of every drug in a year multiplied by the difference in consumption of the drug in question between the month of the current year and the same month of the previous year, multiplied by 100.
A significant decrease was noted in hospitalization days, general hospital outpatient clinic visits, general hospital emergency room visits, and total numbers of visits to community physicians during the first lockdown in the first wave of the pandemic in comparison to 2019. At the end of the lockdown, however, a compensatory increase was noted in all services. In terms of drug consumption, the data show no differences in the effects of the different waves. Our findings reveal that the first wave of COVID-19 was a shock, with a significant reduction in the consumption of health services, but this decrease attenuated with the second wave, due to immediate management interventions and safety rules implemented in hospitals and clinics.
People shun medical services during a fast-spreading epidemic that causes significant mortality. Since new variants of COVID-19 could be part of our lives for the next few years, we should learn how to continue living with the pandemic and develop alternative medical services to maintain health states. Digitization, remote services, telemedicine, and home care, including home hospitalization, should be part of the health services to cope with pandemic situations.
期刊介绍:
The Open Public Health Journal is an Open Access online journal which publishes original research articles, reviews/mini-reviews, short articles and guest edited single topic issues in the field of public health. Topics covered in this interdisciplinary journal include: public health policy and practice; theory and methods; occupational health and education; epidemiology; social medicine; health services research; ethics; environmental health; adolescent health; AIDS care; mental health care. The Open Public Health Journal, a peer reviewed journal, is an important and reliable source of current information on developments in the field. The emphasis will be on publishing quality articles rapidly and freely available worldwide.