COVID-19大流行期间公众对骨科兴趣的波动

Maxwell Davison-Kerwood, Elana Gordy, J. Tafur, Y. Lin, Nicholas Boroda, Mark H. Gonzalez*
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:几项研究表明,在COVID-19大流行的开始和中期,公众对选择性骨科手术的兴趣有所下降,但没有一项研究评估了随着大流行的发展,公众兴趣的恢复(如果有的话)。问题/目的:应用用户友好的工具和可复制的方法来(1)确定COVID-19对探索性和介入性搜索词搜索频率的不同影响;(2)评估公众对一些常见骨科症状及其各自选择程序的兴趣是否已恢复到大流行前的基线水平。方法:使用谷歌趋势信息提取工具,从2018年1月7日至2022年1月15日的谷歌扩展健康趋势(GETH)中提取常见骨科手术和症状的谷歌搜索频率。查询的术语分为两类:探索性和干预性。对每个搜索项进行控制极限分析,以确定特殊原因变化并评估任何回收率。结果:2020年3月15日当周,所有搜索词的搜索量都出现了显著下降,6个搜索词中有5个在2020年假期期间的搜索量至少又下降了一次。与介入性术语的搜索量相比,探索性术语的搜索量最初下降较少,恢复速度快近四倍,但直到研究窗口结束,公众兴趣的波动性才被发现。结论:在这次大流行期间,公众对选择性骨科手术的兴趣仍然是混乱的。本研究首次利用谷歌趋势信息提取工具的新应用,评估了COVID-19时代公众对选择性骨科手术兴趣的初步恢复情况,并及时提供了随着大流行的进展公众看法变化的最新信息。这些结果可用于更好地理解、量化和潜在地预测全国患者群体的利益,并根据实时搜索趋势定制护理、公共推广计划或政策。
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Volatility of Public Interest in Orthopaedics during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Background: Several studies have demonstrated the decrease of public interest in elective orthopaedic surgeries throughout the beginning and middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, but none have assessed the return, if any, of public interest as the pandemic has progressed. Questions/Purpose: Apply a user-friendly tool and replicable methodology to (1) determine differential impacts of COVID-19 on search frequencies for exploratory and interventional search terms; (2) evaluate if public interest towards some common orthopaedic symptoms and their respective elective procedures have returned to pre-pandemic baseline. Method: Google search frequencies for common orthopaedic procedures and symptoms were extracted from Google Extended Trends for Health (GETH) between January 7th, 2018, and January 15th, 2022, using the Google Trends Information Extraction Tool. Queried terms were split into two categories: exploratory and interventional. Control limit analysis was performed for each search term to determine special cause variations and assess any recovery. Results: All search terms saw significant decreases the week of March 15th, 2020, and five of the six saw at least one more drop during the 2020 holiday season. Search volumes for exploratory terms initially fell less and recovered nearly four times faster compared to search volumes for interventional terms, but volatility of public interest was seen until the end of the study window. Conclusions: Public interest in elective orthopaedic procedures continues to be chaotic during this pandemic. This study is the first to assess the initial recovery of public interest in elective orthopaedic procedures in the COVID-19 era using a novel application of the Google Trends Information Extraction Tool and provides a timely update on changes in public perception as the pandemic has progressed. These results can be used to better understand, quantify, and potentially anticipate the interests of the national patient population and tailor care, public outreach programs, or policy based on real-time search trends.
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