AUTHOR=Maglietta Giuseppe , Puntoni Matteo , Caminiti Caterina , Pession Andrea , Lanari Marcello , Caramelli Fabio , Marchetti Federico , De Fanti Alessandro , Iughetti Lorenzo , Biasucci Giacomo , Suppiej Agnese , Miceli Andrea , Ghizzi Chiara , Vergine Gianluca , Aricò Melodie , Stella Marcello , Esposito Susanna , Emilia-Romagna Paediatric COVID-19 network , Diodati Francesca , Palo Chiara Maria , Miniaci Angela , Bertelli Luca , Biserni Giovanni , Troisi Angela , Iacono Alessandra , Bonvicini Federico , Bartolomeo Domenico , Trombetta Andrea , Zini Tommaso , de Paulis Nicoletta , Forest Cristina , Guidi Battista , Di Florio Francesca , Valletta Enrico , Accomando Francesco , Ramundo Greta , Argentiero Alberto , Fainardi Valentina , Deolmi Michela TITLE=Effects of COVID-19-targeted non-pharmaceutical interventions on pediatric hospital admissions in North Italian hospitals, 2017 to 2022: a quasi-experimental study interrupted time-series analysis JOURNAL=Frontiers in Public Health VOLUME=12 YEAR=2024 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/public-health/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1393677 DOI=10.3389/fpubh.2024.1393677 ISSN=2296-2565 ABSTRACT=Background

The use of Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions (NPIs), such as lockdowns, social distancing and school closures, against the COVID-19 epidemic is debated, particularly for the possible negative effects on vulnerable populations, including children and adolescents. This study therefore aimed to quantify the impact of NPIs on the trend of pediatric hospitalizations during 2 years of pandemic compared to the previous 3 years, also considering two pandemic phases according to the type of adopted NPIs.

Methods

This is a multicenter, quasi-experimental before-after study conducted in 12 hospitals of the Emilia-Romagna Region, Northern Italy, with NPI implementation as the intervention event. The 3 years preceding the beginning of NPI implementation (in March 2020) constituted the pre-pandemic phase. The subsequent 2 years were further subdivided into a school closure phase (up to September 2020) and a subsequent mitigation measures phase with less stringent restrictions. School closure was chosen as delimitation as it particularly concerns young people. Interrupted Time Series (ITS) regression analysis was applied to calculate Hospitalization Rate Ratios (HRR) on the diagnostic categories exhibiting the greatest variation. ITS allows the estimation of changes attributable to an intervention, both in terms of immediate (level change) and sustained (slope change) effects, while accounting for pre-intervention secular trends.

Results

Overall, in the 60 months of the study there were 84,368 cases. Compared to the pre-pandemic years, statistically significant 35 and 19% decreases in hospitalizations were observed during school closure and in the following mitigation measures phase, respectively. The greatest reduction was recorded for “Respiratory Diseases,” whereas the “Mental Disorders” category exhibited a significant increase during mitigation measures. ITS analysis confirms a high reduction of level change during school closure for Respiratory Diseases (HRR 0.19, 95%CI 0.08–0.47) and a similar but smaller significant reduction when mitigation measures were enacted. Level change for Mental Disorders significantly decreased during school closure (HRR 0.50, 95%CI 0.30–0.82) but increased during mitigation measures by 28% (HRR 1.28, 95%CI 0.98–1.69).

Conclusion

Our findings provide information on the impact of COVID-19 NPIs which may inform public health policies in future health crises, plan effective control and preventative interventions and target resources where needed.