By Katie Martin, Daniel Kurowski, Phillip Given, Kevin Kennedy, Elianna Clayton on Friday, 16 April 2021
Category: Briefs

The Impact of COVID-19 on the Use of Preventive Health Care

Updated 4/16/2021 to include data through 12/30/2020. Since the original post on 9/9/2020, the data have been adjusted to account for claims submission lags. For more information, see Methods Note below.

COVID-19 has had an extraordinary impact on the US health care system since its emergence in early 2020. One of the largest and most immediate impacts has been the death toll, with the pandemic having claimed more than 560,000 lives as of April 16th, 2021, but the pandemic has also brought a set of (seemingly endless) new trade-offs and choices for people to make as they navigate their daily lives and the health care system. Among them, whether, when, and how to resume their pre-pandemic health care life. How do the risks of leaving their homes and going to medical facilities stack up against the well-documented benefits of preventive care? Whether annual mammograms or other screenings or children's well-child visits and immunizations, each venture into non-emergency health care sparks a calculus of risk and reward without a clear answer.

Several studies have identified a substantial drop in health care utilization in March and April as most medical offices closed or dramatically scaled back operations, and people generally avoided interactions with the health system in the hopes of not contracting the virus, including reductions in outpatient visits, emergency department visits, and elective surgeries like lower joint replacement. However, these studies were often limited in scale and scope. Curious about the effect the pandemic is having on which health care services people receive, the Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI) looked at a sample of health claims clearinghouse records from 18 states containing 184 million claims from 30 million patients in 2019 and 94 million claims from 20 million patients for the first 6 months in 2020. Specifically, we examined women's preventative health services, select services provided during pregnancy and delivery, childhood immunizations, and other sentinel preventive medical services including colonoscopies, and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) tests. Overall, we found that the pandemic is having a significant dampening effect on the use of certain health care services.

Figure 1 compares use of the select services between 2020 and 2019 using a 7-day rolling average. Note that the counts of more recent claims  have been adjusted to compensate for delays in provider's submission of claims, and may change slightly as more claims become available.  See methods note for more information.  Also, note that spikes in the data occur as a result of federal holidays.

Figure 2 shows the percent change in utilization for each service in the 2020 calendar year compared to the 2019 calendar year.  The dropdown menu can be used to adjust the time period to before or after March 13th, 2020 (when many jurisdictions issued a state of emergency), in order to compare service use in that date range in 2020 to the same time period in 2019. "Before March 13th" captures changes in the amount a service was performed during 1/1/2020 - 3/12/2020 compared to 1/1/2019 - 3/12/2019,  and "After March 13th" shows changes in service use for 3/13/2020 - 12/31/2020 compared to 3/13/2019 - 12/31/2019. Note that these data are not adjusted for the patient panel composition, including age and sex, and cannot account for changes in demographics between years. 

Submitted claims for most preventive services we examined, such as mammography and childhood immunizations exhibited significant declines in 2020 compared to 2019, particularly mid-March through mid-April. Even through the end of December 2020, utilization of some preventive services appeared to be running below 2019 levels. Trends from the data through December 30, 2020 show:

This analysis is merely a preliminary glimpse at the impact of COVID-19 on health care utilization in 2020 and is not intended to provide definitive answers about the ways in which the pandemic is affecting people's health care. We expect HCCI's new national dataset, with more than 1 billion claims for approximately 55 million people with employer-sponsored health insurance coverage, which launched in early 2021, will facilitate a much more comprehensive assessment of those questions. These data suggest, though, that for now, people have chosen to forego care they would otherwise have received with potential implications for their long-term health and well-being.