Increasing severity, importance of viral transmission, and environmental exposures for pediatric asthma in a large urban health system, 2018-2023
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Objective
Pediatric asthma is multifactorial: social, environmental, and infectious exposures trigger exacerbations. Policies adopted to mitigate COVID-19 transmission in schools including school closures, mask mandates, and full reopening, provide a natural experiment to investigate the importance of socially-driven exposures, including viral transmission, in pediatric asthma.
Methods
This observational study used retrospective review of all electronic health records from the largest urban health system in New York City over five school years from 2018-2023. We investigated the epidemiology of acute, unscheduled care for pediatric asthma in children ages 5-17 years, including emergency department (ED) visits, hospital admissions, intensive care unit (ICU) stays, and viral testing. Comparison groups were drawn from citywide surveillance data and all-cause visits. We investigated population-level exposures: COVID-19 mitigation policies and wildfire smoke events.
Results
In the post-pandemic period, ED volume for pediatric asthma dropped (p<0.0001); however, children who presented were significantly more likely to require hospital admission and ICU care (p<0.001). Viral testing was employed more frequently, and more frequently positive, in the post-pandemic period (p<0.0001), with rhinovirus driving a greater proportion of pediatric asthma than all-cause adult or pediatric visits (p=0.02). After mask mandates were dropped in early 2022, pediatric asthma peaked during the immediate return-to-school fall period, slightly preceding the winter 2022 peak in viral illnesses. Wildfire smoke events were not significantly associated with pediatric asthma visits.
Conclusions
Socially-driven factors including viral transmission and school policies were important in driving pediatric asthma during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Increased acuity despite lower volumes may help guide health systems as they strive to increase readiness to care for pediatric populations.