E. Brooke Lerner, PhD.

E. Brooke Lerner, PhD, is first author on a study that found since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, nationwide emergency medical services calls have dropped by 26 percent compared to the past two years.

Study: Nationwide EMS Calls Dropped 26% Since Pandemic

Published July 28, 2020

story based on news release by ellen goldbaum

Since early March and the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S., 911 calls for emergency medical services have dropped by 26.1 percent compared to the past two years, according to a new study led by E. Brooke Lerner, PhD, professor and vice chair for research in the Department of Emergency Medicine.

“The public health implications of these findings are alarming. When people are making fewer 911 calls, but those calls are about far more severe emergencies, it means that people with urgent conditions are likely not getting the emergency care they need in a timely way. ”
Professor of emergency medicine
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Fewer 911 Calls, But Greater Emergencies

However, the study also found that EMS-attended deaths have doubled, indicating that when EMS calls were made, they often involved a far more serious emergency.

“The public health implications of these findings are alarming,” says Lerner, PhD, first author on the paper.

“When people are making fewer 911 calls, but those calls are about far more severe emergencies, it means that people with urgent conditions are likely not getting the emergency care they need in a timely way,” she says. “The result is increased morbidity and mortality resulting from conditions not directly related to exposure to SARS-CoV2.” 

Messaging Risks of Seeking Medical Care in Pandemic

This finding covered the six-week period that began on March 2 and this trend persisted through the end of May.

“The doubling of deaths and cardiac arrests during this relatively short period of time — from March through May — demonstrates that people who need emergency health care may be delaying care such that their lives are actually in jeopardy,” Lerner says.

Lerner points to two possible causes: fear of contracting the virus at health care facilities and the impulse to not burden health care facilities with non-COVID-19 issues.

“This may mean that future consideration needs to be given to how we message the risks associated with seeking medical care during a pandemic,” Lerner says. “At the same time that we are stressing how to stay safe from COVID-19, it may also be necessary to stress how important it is to continue to seek care for serious conditions unrelated to the novel coronavirus.”

Injuries Declined Due to Less Social Activities

Lerner adds that the findings echo those of studies in other countries, such as Italy, where there was an increase in heart attack fatalities during the height of the pandemic there.

“The fact that this trend persists even as the pandemic in some areas has started to lessen in severity shows that the fear of accessing health care has continued,” Lerner says.

One positive, unsurprising finding was that the rate of 911 calls related to injuries declined for the obvious reason that during times when regions were shut down, there were fewer opportunities for driving and recreation-related injuries.

This graphic represents over 37 million EMS calls (activations) across the U.S. The number of states submitting to the national EMS repository increased over the study period (2017 – 32 states, 2018 – 40 states, 2019 – 44 states). 

Financial Strain on EMS Agencies a Concern

The study also revealed significant issues related to the financial viability of EMS in this type of environment.

“The financial strain on EMS agencies will have long-term ramifications for maintaining this important safety net for our communities, especially those agencies whose revenue is based solely on patient transports,” Lerner notes.

The study consisted of a comparative, retrospective analysis of standardized patient care records that are submitted by more than 10,000 EMS agencies across 47 states and territories nearly in real-time.

Those data are submitted to the National Emergency Medical Services Information System database, which stores EMS data nationwide.

The study was published online June 17 in Academic Emergency Medicine. Co-authors are Craig D. Newgard, MD, of Oregon Health and Science University, and N. Clay Mann, PhD, of the University of Utah School of Medicine.

The work was supported by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Office of Emergency Medical Services and the Health Resources and Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.