Mental health disorders, malaria, and heart disease most affected by COVID-19 disruption

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Disrupted care during the COVID-19 pandemic led to sharp increases in other causes of illness and death, particularly mental health disorders, malaria in young children, and stroke and heart disease in older adults, according to Chinese researchers. They used data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021 to simulate the burden of 174 health conditions in 2020 and 2021 across 204 countries and territories, age groups, and sexes. Depressive and anxiety disorders, along with malaria, were the most affected, while heart disease and stroke saw more modest, but notable, increases, the scientists say. These insights should be integrated into post-pandemic plans to help countries improve resilience, they conclude.

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From: BMJ Group

Mental health disorders, malaria, and heart disease most affected by covid pandemic

Findings provide a roadmap to help strengthen health systems for future crises

Disrupted care during the covid-19 pandemic led to sharp increases in other non-covid causes of illness and death, particularly mental health disorders, malaria in young children, and stroke and heart disease in older adults, finds a study published by The BMJ today.

For example, new cases of depressive disorders rose by 23% in 5-14 year-olds and malaria deaths rose by 14% in children under five years old from 2020-2021.

The researchers say future responses to potential pandemics or other public health emergencies of international concern “must extend beyond infection control to address long term, syndemic health impacts.”

Most healthcare services were severely affected during the pandemic, hindering efforts to prevent and control many conditions. Yet an in-depth analysis of the pandemic's impact on other causes of illness and death is still needed.

To address this, researchers in China used data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021 to simulate the burden of 174 health conditions in 2020 and 2021 across various regions, age groups, and sexes.

A total of 204 countries and territories were included in the analysis. The main measures of interest were incidence (number of new cases), prevalence (number of people living with a condition), deaths, and disability adjusted life years (DALYs) - a combined measure of quantity and quality of life.

Depressive and anxiety disorders, along with malaria, were the most notably affected, with a significant rise in disease burden compared with other causes.

For example, age standardised DALY rates for malaria rose by 12% (to 98 per 100,000). DALY rates for depressive and anxiety disorders also rose by 12% (to 83 per 100,000) and 14% (to 74 per 100,000), respectively, especially among females.

Age standardised incidence and prevalence rates for depressive disorders rose by 14% (to 618 per 100,000) and 10% (to 414 per 100,000), respectively, while anxiety disorders saw a 15% rise (to 102 and 628 per 100,000).

Prevalence rates for heart disease also saw notable increases, particularly among individuals aged 70 and above (169 per 100,000 for ischaemic heart disease and 27 per 100,000 for stroke).

There was also a significant (12%) increase in the age standardised death rate due to malaria, particularly among children under five years old in the African region.

The researchers acknowledge that their methods may not fully capture the complexity and variation of pandemic-related disruptions, and say factors such as uneven quality of data across regions, potential underreporting, and delayed diagnoses during the pandemic, may have affected the accuracy of their results.

However, they say their analysis offers broader scope than previous studies and provides actionable, policy relevant recommendations to improve health system preparedness.

As such, they conclude: “These findings underscore the urgent need to strengthen health system resilience, enhance integrated surveillance, and adopt syndemic-informed strategies to support equitable preparedness for future public health emergencies.”

This study highlights how data can guide smarter recovery to ensure that future health crises disrupt lives less and afflict populations more evenly, say researchers in a linked editorial.

By integrating these insights into post-pandemic plans, countries can improve resilience, they write. Concrete steps include allocating budgets for essential services in emergencies, reinforcing primary health care, expanding disease surveillance networks, and prioritising universal health coverage with a focus on disadvantaged or marginalised communities.

“Ultimately, recognising and planning for the pandemic’s indirect toll will save lives and leave health systems stronger and fairer for future public health emergencies,” they conclude.

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conference:
The BMJ
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Zhejiang University School of Medicine, China
Funder: This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant no. U23A20496, 82173577, 81672005, and 72404242); the Zhejiang Province Vanguard Goose-Leading Initiative (2024C03216); the National Key R&D Program of China (2024YFA1015600); and the Mega-Project of National Science and Technology for the 13th Five-Year Plan of China (Grant Numbers: 2018ZX10715-014-002). The funders had no role in considering the study design or in the collection, analysis, interpretation of data, writing of the report, or decision to submit the article for publication. SY takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.
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