1. The effect of the Covid-19 shutdown on glycemic testing and control
- Author
-
Sharma, Anu, Greene, Dina N, Chambliss, Allison B, Farnsworth, Christopher W, French, Deborah, Herman, Daniel S, Kavsak, Peter A, Merrill, Anna E, Margaret Lo, Sheng-Ying, Lyon, Martha E, Winston-McPherson, Gabrielle, Pearson, Lauren N, SoRelle, Jeffrey A, Waring, Avantika C, and Schmidt, Robert L
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Outpatients ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Covid-19 ,HbA1c ,Glycemic control ,General Clinical Medicine ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused a halt to in-person ambulatory care. We evaluated how the reduction in access to care affected HbA1c testing and patient HbA1c levels.MethodsHbA1c data from 11 institutions were extracted to compare testing volume and the percentage of abnormal results between a pre-pandemic period (January-June 2019, period 1) and a portion of the COVID-19 pandemic period (Jan-June 2020, period 2). HbA1c results greater than 6.4% were categorized as abnormal.ResultsHbA1C testing volumes decreased in March, April and May by 23, 61 and 40% relative to the corresponding months in 2019. The percentage of abnormal results increased in April, May and June (25, 23, 9%). On average, we found that the frequency of abnormal results increased by 0.31% for every 1% decrease in testing volume (p
- Published
- 2021