Dear Editor,

In 2020, emergency medical care–as the frontline of healthcare–had to rapidly adapt staff [1], stuff [2], and structures [3] to receive and take care of both suspected and confirmed COVID-19 patients while protecting healthcare workers and continuing to serve the community. Despite large volumes of patients being analyzed, different emergency department (ED) admission patterns have been described in literature during epidemics or pandemics. For example, a decrease in ED total visits has been consistently reported during the 2003 SARS outbreak [4], while a significantly higher number of admissions was registered during influenza seasons (due to influenza-like symptoms) [5]. During the COVID-19 pandemic, a consistent decrease in ED visits has been recorded worldwide. Italy has been the first western country to register a reduction in individuals seeking medical attention in EDs, although studies describing this phenomenon are mostly limited to the first pandemic wave [6,7,8].

To analyze ED visits in the Veneto Region (Northeastern Italy) during the first and second pandemic waves, anonymized records of ED presentations in 2019 and 2020 of adults (≥ 15 years) were collected from the regional database of emergency medical care. Veneto Region provides healthcare to an overall population of nearly 4.9 million inhabitants. Overall, 54 EDs were available to the population during the study period–46 public and 8 private. The database contains demographic details (age, gender), date of visit, arrival mode (“walk-in” or “ambulance”), clinical presentation (chief complaint), triage code, and outcome (final disposition). Treatment priority was defined at the moment of presentation by a specifically trained nurse (as per Italian guidelines) attributing one of the following triage codes: white (non-urgent); green (low priority); yellow (urgent, potentially life-threatening condition); red (critical, life-threatening condition). Finally, the outcome of each ED presentation was classified as: death at the ED; hospitalization; home discharge (including referral to ambulatory services for follow-up and refusal of admission or further medical assistance). The trend of monthly ED visits in 2020 was plotted against the new daily SARS-CoV-2 infections and hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Veneto. The bimestrial trend of ED visits for the ten most frequent clinical presentations (over the entire study period) was then graphically represented. A year-over-year change (comparing the same month in 2019 and 2020) in the number of monthly ED visits was calculated, stratified by triage code. Finally, the proportion of visits by arrival mode, triage code, and outcome were calculated for 2019 and 2020. All analyses were carried out with R Studio Integrated Development for R (RStudio, Inc., Boston, MA).

A total of 3,298,672 ED presentations were retrieved. After removing patients aged < 15 years, 1,665,895 presentations in 2019 and 1,202,872 in 2020 were included in the study. Gender and age were almost equally distributed between the 2 years. ED visits consistently dropped in March (− 52%) and April (− 52%) 2020 during the first pandemic wave as already described in other Italian settings [6,7,8]. During summer, the reduction of SARS-CoV-2 contagion and COVID-19 related-hospitalization rates were associated with a gradual increase in ED presentations. Starting in October 2020, the second wave resulted in a further decline of ED visits, which was more evident in November and December 2020, but less marked than during the first wave (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Emergency Department Visits (EDVs) in the Veneto Region and regional incidence of COVID-19 (daily new cases and COVID-19 hospitalized patients). Presentations significantly dropped in March and April 2020 (-52% in both months)

Several factors may have contributed to emergency medical care avoidance. Since the Italian National Health Service is a publicly funded, universal healthcare system, requiring co-payment for medical examination and procedures performed in the ED only in specific cases, the fear of unexpected medical bills in this context unlikely explains the phenomenon. No limitations were imposed to impede the population's access to the emergency medical care system in the Region, except for a temporary closure of the Schiavonia’s hospital in which the first domestic COVID-19 cases were detected. Nevertheless, this case alone could not explain the steep reductions observed in March–April. It is reasonable to think that, during the lockdown, travel restrictions and the stop of outdoor and sports activities drastically reduced accidental traumas, as the vast closure of working places probably impacted road or occupational accidents. In fact, burn or traumas registered a considerable reduction (− 29.8%) between 2019 and 2020 (− 62.7% when comparing March and April alone) (Fig. 2).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Bimestrial trend of emergency department visits for the ten most frequent clinical presentations among adults in Veneto Region (2019–2020). The “Burn or Trauma” category represented the most frequent presentation, with a marked drop during the first pandemic wave. Dyspnea as chief complaint instead increased during both pandemic waves

In pre-pandemic times, individuals’ decisions regarding their health are complex and influenced by numerous factors [9]. On the other hand, during epidemics and pandemics, the anxiety deriving from the fear of contagion incentivizes adaptive mechanisms (e.g., the propensity to social distancing, hand sanitization) but can lead to dangerous behavioral modifications (e.g., social isolation or compulsive actions) [10]. Persons could have perceived EDs as overcrowded structures, with a heightened risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Media portraying hospitals on the brink of collapse and daily reports on skyrocketing contagions with a concurrent contraction of ordinary and intensive care beds availability are likely to have promoted anxiety among citizens, as reported during previous outbreaks. Ferry et al., in a small sample of patients presenting for chest pain in a single ED in Scotland, described a reluctance in seeking medical attention at the beginning of the pandemic due to media reports and SARS-CoV-2 exposure concern [11]. Similar media descriptions, along with communications from national and regional governors, and local administrations, asking the population to stay at home and access the ED only in cases of real need, could also have contributed to generating empathy with a further avoidance of emergency medical care, as explained by social imitation theories. In support of this interpretation, the present study found that white and green triage codes accounted for most ED presentation reduction in 2020 (− 30% and − 32%, respectively) (Fig. 3), mainly represented by dermatological, ENT, ophthalmological, and odontostomatological symptoms.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Triage codes and outcome of emergency department (ED) visits in the Veneto Region (2019–2020). The analysis included 807,080 ED presentations in 2019 and 596,398 in 2020. All white codes were excluded (N = 1,457,515). Also, presentations with missing data regarding outcomes of interest were excluded (N = 7774)

ED overcrowding is a major public health issue worldwide. It is unclear if the dramatic reduction recorded with non-urgent and less urgent triage codes contributed to excess mortality [12], especially regarding patients who did not seek urgent medical attention. However, no difference before and after the COVID-19 outbreak was found in Regional calls to emergency medical service (EMS) [13], if not an increase compared to the same period of the previous year [14] as confirmed by the findings of the present study (arrival by ambulance: 34.7% in 2020, 28.6% in 2019). Also, hospitalizations following the ED visits increased from 15.0% in 2019 to 21.0% in 2020 (excluding white triage codes: from 25.8% in 2019 to 34.2% in 2020). A marked increase can be observed as well in the percentage of yellow triage codes (Fig. 3), with dyspnea becoming the second most common clinical presentation in both pandemic peaks (Fig. 2). This trend suggests that individuals experiencing severe and worrisome symptoms–potentially with an urgent underlying medical condition–sought medical attention or presented any way to the ED and were admitted. Yet, looking into the reasons for admission goes beyond the purpose of this study, and as such, a similar conclusion will require further studies to be confirmed, and so will trends concerning other reasons for admissions. What is clear is that low priority codes dropped, potentially reducing overcrowding and unnecessary access to EDs. The consequences on healthcare use deriving from the present pandemic can allow us to tackle the increasingly recognized challenge of “too much medicine”, when unnecessary ED visits end up being harmful to the individual and the society by consuming unnecessary resources [15]. A future integrated approach based on the national registry–reporting specific causes of mortality–and the analysis of specific conditions and symptoms that underwent the greatest reduction among ED admissions could be attempted to provide useful implications for both emergency medicine and public health.

It was impossible to detect repeated visits to the ED or further adjust for comorbidities or other individual characteristics since data retrieved from the regional database were anonymized. However, the large population and the presence of a public healthcare system allowed to obtain an unbiased overview of ED visit trends.

In conclusion, this is the first population-based study in Italy to examine in-depth ED presentations during the first two COVID-19 pandemic waves and trace patients' specific comparative trajectories. These findings suggest a drastic reduction of non-urgent and less urgent ED presentations that are likely to be reconducted to lockdown measures and perceived fear of contagion in hospital-based services. Given how relevant appropriateness in emergency medical care is, future studies should shed light on the actual causes and the consequences of the drastic reduction in ED visits observed in the present study. Such results have important implications for public health experts to re-shape the emergency medical care system adapting it to the “new normal” while promoting better use of EDs and EMS.