Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T16:02:48.018Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effect of COVID-19 pandemic on utilisation of community-based mental health care in North-East of Italy: A psychiatric case register study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2023

E. Prina*
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
F. Tedeschi
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
D. Salazzari
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
T. Botte
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
M. Ballarin
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
L. Rabbi
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
G. Imperadore
Affiliation:
Mental Health Department, Local Health District n. 9 of Verona, Verona, Italy
S. Roccato
Affiliation:
Mental Health Department, Local Health District n. 9 of Verona, Verona, Italy
S. Nicolaou
Affiliation:
Mental Health Department, Local Health District n. 9 of Verona, Verona, Italy
M. Ruggeri
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
F. Gomez
Affiliation:
Mental Health Department, Local Health District n. 9 of Verona, Verona, Italy
A. Lasalvia
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
F. Amaddeo
Affiliation:
Department of Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Science, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
*
Author for correspondence: E. Prina, E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aims

WHO declared that mental health care should be considered one essential health service to be maintained during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This study aims to describe the effect of lockdown and restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy on mental health services’ utilisation, by considering psychiatric diagnoses and type of mental health contacts.

Methods

The study was conducted in the Verona catchment area, located in the Veneto region (northeastern Italy). For each patient, mental health contacts were grouped into: (1) outpatient care, (2) social and supportive interventions, (3) rehabilitation interventions, (4) multi-professional assessments, (5) day care. A ‘difference in differences’ approach was used: difference in the number of contacts between 2019 and 2020 on the weeks of lockdown and intermediate restrictions was compared with the same difference in weeks of no or reduced restrictions, and such difference was interpreted as the effect of restrictions. Both a global regression on all contacts and separate regressions for each type of service were performed and Incidence Rate Ratios (IRRs) were calculated.

Results

In 2020, a significant reduction in the number of patients who had mental health contacts was found, both overall and for most of the patients’ characteristics considered (except for people aged 18–24 years for foreign-born population and for those with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Moreover, in 2020 mental health contacts had a reduction of 57 096 (−33.9%) with respect to 2019; such difference remained significant across the various type of contacts considered, with rehabilitation interventions and day care showing the greatest reduction. Negative Binomial regressions displayed a statistically significant effect of lockdown, but not of intermediate restrictions, in terms of reduction in the number of contacts. The lockdown period was responsible of a 32.7% reduction (IRR 0.673; p-value <0.001) in the overall number of contacts. All type of mental health contacts showed a reduction ascribable to the lockdown, except social and supportive interventions.

Conclusions

Despite the access to community mental health care during the pandemic was overall reduced, the mental health system in the Verona catchment area was able to maintain support for more vulnerable and severely ill patients, by providing continuity of care and day-by-day support through social and supportive interventions.

Type
Special Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Since the first documented cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on 21st of February 2020, Italy has been one of the most affected countries after China (Istituto Superiore di Sanità, 2020). The rapid spread of SARS-CoV-2 throughout the Italian territory, the dangerousness of the disease, required a great number of resources not promptly available at the beginning (Lasalvia et al., Reference Lasalvia, Amaddeo, Porru, Carta, Tardivo, Bovo, Ruggeri and Bonetto2021). On 9 March, the government imposed a national quarantine, called ‘lockdown’, to reduce the spread of the coronavirus, limiting the movement of the population except for reasons of necessity (e.g., work, health visits, etc.). On 3 May, the Italian Government put an end to the lockdown period (Governo Italiano, 2020), gradually resuming economic activities, and slowly allowing for movements within the Region with a different level of restrictions based on the trend of pandemic emergency (Hale et al., Reference Hale, Angrist, Goldszmidt, Kira, Petherick, Phillips, Webster, Cameron-Blake, Hallas, Majumdar and Tatlow2021).

In this framework, high-stress levels were observed on (1) the general population, with an increase of the level of depression and anxiety (Fiorillo et al., Reference Fiorillo, Sampogna, Giallonardo, Del Vecchio, Luciano, Albert, Carmassi, Carrà, Cirulli, Dell'Osso, Nanni, Pompili, Sani, Tortorella and Volpe2020; Moccia et al., Reference Moccia, Janiri, Giuseppin, Agrifoglio, Monti, Mazza, Caroppo, Fiorillo, Sani, Di Nicola and Janiri2020); on (2) people with mental conditions, with a higher vulnerability in terms of physical and mental health (de Girolamo et al., Reference de Girolamo, Cerveri, Clerici, Monzani, Spinogatti, Starace, Tura and Vita2020; Monteleone et al., Reference Monteleone, Cascino, Marciello, Abbate-Daga, Baiano, Balestrieri, Barone, Bertelli, Carpiniello, Castellini, Corrivetti, De Giorgi, Favaro, Gramaglia, Marzola, Meneguzzo, Monaco, Oriani, Pinna, Rania, Redaelli, Renna, Ricca, Salvo, Baldissera, Segura-Garcia, Todisco, Volpe, Zeppegno and Monteleone2021); on (3) healthcare workers, with a more frequent burn-out and psychological problems (emotional exhaustion 58.3%; low professional efficacy 57.5%; and high cynicism 39.2%) (Lasalvia et al., Reference Lasalvia, Rigon, Rugiu, Negri, Del Zotti, Amaddeo and Bonetto2022); and on (4) general practitioners (GPs) (44.7% reported COVID-19-related traumatic events, 36% reported symptoms of anxiety, 17.9% symptoms of at least moderate depression and 25.4% symptoms of burnout) (Lasalvia et al., Reference Lasalvia, Amaddeo, Porru, Carta, Tardivo, Bovo, Ruggeri and Bonetto2021). Not at least, the fear associated with the coronavirus pandemic and the consequent lockdown, had a relevant impact on psychological wellbeing (Naqvi, Reference Naqvi2020).

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared that mental health care should be considered one essential health service to be maintained throughout the COVID-19 health crisis for different populations (World Health Organization, 2020). Nevertheless, a study conducted in China (Zhong et al., Reference Zhong, Zhou, He, Li, Li, Ng, Xiang and Chiu2020) describes that 83% of participants with perceived mental health needs ascribed their lack of help-seeking to barriers to accessibility and availability of mental health services. In fact, the pandemic has also brought the need for fast and flexible adaptations in the health organisation to balance the increased demand (Kuzman et al., Reference Kuzman, Vahip, Fiorillo, Beezhold, Pinto da Costa, Skugarevsky, Dom, Pajevic, Peles, Mohr, Kleinberg, Chkonia, Balazs, Flannery, Mazaliauskiene, Chihai, Samochowiec, Cozman, Mihajlovic, Izakova, Arango and Goorwod2021) and the contact's reductions among patients and between patients and professionals (Pignon et al., Reference Pignon, Gourevitch, Tebeka, Dubertret, Cardot, Masson, Trebalag, Barruel, Yon, Hemery, Loric, Rabu, Pelissolo, Leboyer, Schürhoff and Pham-Scottez2020). The main challenges occurred in day and residential care: most day facilities have been temporarily closed, and residential patients have had limited permission or no leave (Carpiniello et al., Reference Carpiniello, Tusconi, Zanalda, Di Sciascio and Di Giannantonio2020). Other changes have affected outpatient care, with national and regional rules limiting interventions to most urgent cases. Home visits, a common practice in most Community Mental Health Services (CMHSs), have been drastically reduced (de Girolamo et al., Reference de Girolamo, Cerveri, Clerici, Monzani, Spinogatti, Starace, Tura and Vita2020) and telepsychiatry has been employed worldwide to deliver assessments and clinical follow-up for psychiatric outpatients (Gentile et al., Reference Gentile, Torales, O'Higgins, Figueredo, Castaldelli-Maia, De Berardis, Petito, Bellomo and Ventriglio2022).

Despite this critical context, in our knowledge there is a lack of quantitative evidence that observe the longitudinal trend of access to mental health services in Italy and their consequences on mental health patients in a long period of time (Meloni et al., Reference Meloni, de Girolamo and Rossi2020). Some quantitative studies have reported variations both in the frequency of outpatient psychiatric interviews and in the composition of users, with a reported increase in requests; others reported a general description of the change in mental health services mainly during or shortly after the lockdown period. However, no study has explored changes in frequency and type of mental health access occurring during the first pandemic year in a large area served by an integrated community-based mental health system.

This study aims to fill this gap by evaluating the association between the severity of pandemic restriction in Italy and the mental health services’ utilisation and, specifically by looking at diagnoses and type of contacts most affected by lockdown and restrictions.

Methods

Study design

We conducted a retrospective analysis by using an administrative database. This study was designed to: (1) evaluate the association of the lockdown and the intermediate restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the mental healthcare provision by comparing the access to community mental health care between 2019 and 2020 in the Mental Health Department of the Verona catchment area; (2) to explore the effect of clinical characteristics (i.e., psychiatric diagnoses) and types of contacts on changes in mental health contacts occurring over the two years considered.

Lockdown refers to the time-period from 9 March 2020 to 3 May 2020 (8 weeks). Intermediate restrictions are part of the timeframe period from 9 May 2020 to 31 December 2020. This timeframe is not continuous but was identified based on an index (see the ‘Estimate of the effect of lockdown and intermediate restriction on the number of contacts’ section below for more details).

The research project complied with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki regarding medical research in humans and it was approved by the local Ethics Committee (3327CESC, Prot. 35819, 14 June 2021).

Setting

This study was conducted in the Verona catchment area, located in the Veneto Region (northeastern Italy). The main agency providing psychiatric care for the adult population is the Department of Mental Health, which covers a population of approximately 924 742 inhabitants, comprises five psychiatric acute inpatient wards located in five general hospitals. Outside the general hospital, a network of community mental health centres, each serving a well-defined catchment area, provides outpatient care and community care in close conjunction with other health and social local services. The Department of mental health also provides rehabilitation and recovery programs through day-centres and residential facilities, in-house and domiciliary services and collaborate with welfare, housing and educational services.

Data sources

Since 1978, the year of implementation of the Italian psychiatric reform, a Psychiatric Case Register (PCR) routinely records, for all subjects seeking psychiatric and/or psychological care, sociodemographic characteristics, ICD-10 diagnoses, past psychiatric and medical history, clinical data, in-patient mental health care and outpatient contacts (Tansella and Burti, Reference Tansella and Burti2003). The PCR is a local database that includes routinely information from the Mental Health Department of Verona collected by mental health professionals; the resulting data become part of the Veneto Region Information System and then transmitted and included into the Italian Mental Health Information System. The PCR has been an extremely reliable and useful tool to monitor and evaluate the epidemiology of mental disorders and the provision of mental health care in this large catchment area (Amaddeo et al., Reference Amaddeo, Beecham, Bonizzato, Fenyo, Knapp and Tansella1997, Reference Amaddeo, Zambello, Tansella and Thornicroft2001, Reference Amaddeo, Barbui, Perini, Biggeri and Tansella2007).

Contacts and type of services

For each patient, mental health contacts were grouped into five components (supplementary material): (1) outpatient care, which includes all contacts at the outpatient and community level, mainly delivered by psychiatrists, clinical psychologists and community nurses; (2) social and supportive interventions, which includes provision of social services by mental health staff (especially social workers) as well as home visits, visits within healthcare facilities run by other agencies or visits to the premises of voluntary organisations; (3) rehabilitation interventions, which covered all contacts at rehabilitation groups and individual rehabilitation interventions delivered at the day centres mainly by occupational therapists and psychiatric rehabilitation therapists; (4) multi-professional assessments, which includes meetings of members of mental health staff with those of other healthcare or social agencies or among mental health staff; (5) day care, derived from the number of days spent at day centres, in a public sector specialized mental health care.

These five components represent the functional (but not organisational) components of the community mental health care and also provide a logical set of categories according to which to evaluate changes in the utilisation of mental health services during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Data collection and statistical analyses

Study sample

The study included all contacts made by adult patients (>18 years old) with the services of Mental Health Department of the Verona catchment area between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2020. All type of contacts (with psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses, psychiatric rehabilitation therapists, occupational therapists and social workers) provided by mental health services were included.

Comparison between 2019 and 2020

The number of mental health contacts occurring over each year was calculated, both globally and for each type of service. The number of patients with at least one contact in each year was also calculated, both globally and for each group of given sociodemographic, contextual and clinical variables.

As for sociodemographic variables, citizenship (‘Italian’, ‘other’), age bands (‘18–24’, ‘25–44’, ‘45–64’, ‘⩾65’), marital status (‘single’, ‘married’, ‘separated/divorced/widower’), living situation (‘alone’, ‘with family members’, ‘shelter/residential facility’) and gender were considered. Moreover, the number of patients with at least one contact in each year was computed both by degree of urbanisation at municipal level with data from EuroStat (Dijkstra and Poelman, Reference Dijkstra and Poelman2014) and by diagnostic groups (ICD-10 codes, WHO, 1992) as follows: schizophrenia and related disorders (codes F20 to F29), affective disorders (codes F30 to F39); neurotic or somatoform disorders (codes F40 to F48) and other diagnoses (all other ICD-10 F and Z codes).

Both in the case of the number of contacts and of the number of people, equality of between year 2019 and 2020 was tested, in all cases, through the variance test for Poisson-distributed variables (Cochran, Reference Cochran1954).

Estimate of the effect of lockdown and intermediate restriction on the number of contacts

The dataset is made up by the weeks of the years 2019 and 2020 (by considering the length of the last week of 2019 8 days and of the last week of leap year 2020 9 days, so that no day of the year will be excluded). The main variable of interest was the level of restrictions related to the pandemic emergency. In particular, the ‘Covid Stringency Index’ (CSI) related to Italy (and measured daily) was used in order to divide the weeks of year 2020 (and of year 2019, by comparison) into three classes: ‘no or reduced restrictions’ (average CSI below 0.7), ‘intermediate restrictions’ (average CSI between 0.7 and 0.8) and ‘lockdown’ (average CSI above 0.8).

The ‘Covid Stringency Index’ is an indicator, ranged from 0 to 1, created by a group of researchers from the University of Oxford (Hale et al., Reference Hale, Angrist, Goldszmidt, Kira, Petherick, Phillips, Webster, Cameron-Blake, Hallas, Majumdar and Tatlow2021) to estimate the level of restrictions related to the containment measures of the pandemic in the various states of the world. For a given country, the CSI value was obtained by considering, for each day of the year, nine different variables, including any decisions regarding the limitation of individual travel or the closure of schools, economic and work activities.

A negative binomial regression model was chosen, to take into account both the discrete nature of the outcome and the presence of overdispersion. In order to take into account that not all weeks have the same number of working days (due both to public holidays and to the higher length of the last week of each year), such variable was inserted as an exposure (making the outcome ‘number of contacts per working day’). However, since, from one side, in non-working days there could still be contacts since the emergency service is guaranteed and, from the other side, there could be less contacts in weeks where public holidays are present, the fraction of working days in the week will be inserted as a control variable in the regression. Furthermore, since the COVID-19 restrictions include the travel ones, we will insert an indicator variable for weeks that included public holidays in days where inter-regional travels were either banned or discouraged.

A ‘difference in differences’ (Higgins et al., Reference Higgins, Ramsay, Reeves, Deeks, Shea, Valentine, Tugwell and Wells2013) approach was used: in particular, the difference of the number of contacts between 2019 and 2020 on the weeks of lockdown and intermediate restrictions was compared with the same difference in weeks of no or reduced restrictions, and such difference was interpreted as the estimated effect of restrictions. To do so, the following indicators were inserted in the regression: one related to year 2020 and two related to the period of the year (one for the weeks that had intermediate restrictions in 2020 and one for the weeks that were lived in lockdown in 2020). The two interactions between the year-variable and the restriction-variables are our effects of interest.

Both a global regression on all contacts and separate regressions for each type of service were performed and Incidence Rate Ratios (IRRs) were calculated. A global test on equality of the two coefficients related to the effects of restrictions across service type was also performed, in order to assess whether there is evidence of systematic differences across service types. All analyses were performed using Stata 17 (StataCorp, 2021).

Results

Table 1 compares personal characteristics of patients who had at least one contact with the community mental health system of the Verona catchment area in 2019 (n = 9592) and in 2020 (n = 8680). A significant reduction in number of patients who had mental health contacts was registered in 2020, both overall and in almost all the categories considered, except for people aged 18–24 years (−5.7%; p-value 0.290), for foreign-born population (−7.4%; p-value 0.090) and for patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and related disorders (−5.0%; p-value 0.122). The difference between the number of patients who had mental health contacts in 2019 and in 2020 was not statistically significant even for first-ever patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and related disorders.

Table 1. Comparison between numbers of patients who had access to mental health services in 2019 and 2020 by socio-demographic and diagnostic characteristics

Notes. Significant results are highlighted in bold.

By considering the number of contacts, 57 096 (−33.9%) fewer mental health contacts in 2020 were registered with respect to 2019 (p-value < 0.001). Such difference remained statistically significant (p-value <0.001 in all cases) across the various type of contacts (Table 2), although with a different magnitude. Rehabilitation interventions and number of days spent at day-centres had the greatest decrease over 2020, showing respectively a reduction of 24 105 (−50.6%) and 20 132 (−63.4%) compared to 2019. Conversely, social and supportive interventions had the lowest reduction in 2020, with 1177 (−5.0%) fewer contacts than 2019. Multi-professional contacts and outpatient contacts showed an intermediate pattern trend between the previous categories, with respectively 555 (−37.9%) and 11 127 (−17.5%) fewer contacts in 2020 as compared with 2019.

Table 2. Comparison between numbers of MH contacts registered in 2019 and 2020 by type of contacts

Notes. Significant results are highlighted in bold.

Negative Binomial regressions (Table 3) displayed a statistically significant estimated effect of lockdown, but not of intermediate restrictions, in terms of reduction in number of contacts. In particularly, the overall reduction in number of contacts ascribable to the lockdown is 32.7% (IRR 0.673; p-value <0.001). All type of contacts showed a decreasing effect of the lockdown, except for social and supportive interventions (IRR 1.082).

Table 3. Estimated effect of lockdown and restrictions by type of contact

Notes. IRR, Incidence Rate Ratio; IC, Confidence Interval; SE, Standard Error.

Significant results are highlighted in bold.

Overall, a lack of statistical significance (p-value 0.905) and a very small associated point estimate (IRR 0.987, corresponding to a 1.3% reduction) was found for intermediate restrictions. However, they were estimated to more than halve the number of multi-professional assessments (−59.4%; p-value 0.015). On the contrary, despite a 24.0% increase, the effect on social and supportive interventions marginally failed to reach statistical significance (p-value 0.056); all the other types of contacts showed small and non-significant effects.

A graph of the results of negative binomial regressions is reported in Fig. 1.

Fig. 1. Estimated effect of lockdown and restrictions by type of contact

Notes: Incidence Rate Ratio on X axis, levels of stringency on Y axis.

Discussion

To our knowledge, this is one of the first studies that analysed the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on utilisation of community-based mental health services using routine collected data and a ‘difference in differences’ approach comparing 2019 and 2020 on the weeks of lockdown, intermediate restrictions and no restrictions. In contrast to findings reported by nation-wide surveys conducted over the same period (Fiorillo et al., Reference Fiorillo, Sampogna, Giallonardo, Del Vecchio, Luciano, Albert, Carmassi, Carrà, Cirulli, Dell'Osso, Nanni, Pompili, Sani, Tortorella and Volpe2020; Moccia et al., Reference Moccia, Janiri, Giuseppin, Agrifoglio, Monti, Mazza, Caroppo, Fiorillo, Sani, Di Nicola and Janiri2020; Vahratian et al., Reference Vahratian, Blumberg, Terlizzi and Schiller2021) we did not find an increase in the number of patients making their first-ever contact for depression or anxiety disorders. Conversely, we found an overall reduction in the number of patients asking for mental health care in 2020 as compared to 2019, and this reduction applies to every diagnostic group considered. This was probably due to some limitations in the accessibility of healthcare services in general, due to national and regional legislations, together with the fear of being infected by the virus, that might have prevented many patients from attending healthcare facilities (Carpiniello et al., Reference Carpiniello, Tusconi, Zanalda, Di Sciascio and Di Giannantonio2020). Moreover, the reduction in number of patients seeking mental health help may be related to organisational changes and restrictions that occurred in most Italian mental health facilities to reduce the spread of the virus (de Girolamo et al., Reference de Girolamo, Cerveri, Clerici, Monzani, Spinogatti, Starace, Tura and Vita2020). It may be also possible that some people might have asked for mental health care to their GPs or to other private agencies with lower barriers to access.

When stratifying the population by sociodemographic and diagnostic characteristics, we found that the reduction in the number of patients asking for mental health care in 2020 remained statistically significant for every considered category, except for patients with schizophrenia and related disorders, for younger people (aged 18–24 years) and for the foreign-born population. Such fining might be interpreted as the result of a higher average clinical severity within those subgroups, which might have encouraged both patients and mental health professionals to maintain regular mental health contacts even in a period of restrictions due to the pandemic.

As for the foreign-born population it is known that first contact in emergency department and first contact as psychiatric inpatient occurred more often in migrants than their autochthonous counterpart (Cristofalo et al., Reference Cristofalo, Bonetto, Ballarin, Amaddeo, Ruggeri, Nosè and Barbui2018; Graetz et al., Reference Graetz, Rechel, Groot, Norredam and Pavlova2017). Such supposed higher average clinical severity in this subgroup, might have reduced for such patients the otherwise common tendency to avoid or delay usual care during 2020 because of the pandemic and its related restrictions. Nevertheless, this is a controversial interpretation: some authors underlined the possible presence of some additional barriers in the access to mental health services during pandemic, which might have specifically affected some subgroups of patients of foreign origin like, e.g., migrants and asylum-seekers (Aragona et al., Reference Aragona, Barbato, Cavani, Costanzo and Mirisola2020).

The lack of reduction in mental health contacts for young adults during 2020 was probably due to the fact that they represent a particularly vulnerable population that experienced particularly high levels of distress during pandemic as compared to other age groups (Talevi et al., Reference Talevi, Socci, Carai, Carnaghi, Faleri, Trebbi, Bernardo, Capelli and Pacitti2020). That was probably related to some mental health risk factors, such as frequent unemployment condition, social isolation experienced during lockdown and high level of distress related to the concern about COVID-19 infected relatives or acquaintances (Liang et al., Reference Liang, Ren, Cao, Hu, Qin, Li and Mei2020; Moreno et al., Reference Moreno, Wykes, Galderisi, Nordentoft, Crossley, Jones, Cannon, Correll, Byrne, Carr, Chen, Gorwood, Johnson, Kärkkäinen, Krystal, Lee, Lieberman, López-Jaramillo, Männikkö, Philips, Uchida, Vieta, Vita and Arango2020). Another possible reason might be the higher average familiarity of youths with technologies often involved in telepsychiatry (Nicholas et al., Reference Nicholas, Bell, Thompson, Valentine, Simsir, Sheppard and Adams2021), allowing for a more extensive use of this tool and thus reducing the number of young patients who might have faced a delay or an avoidance of the usual mental health services in 2020. It is important to underline that all the three subgroups not showing a reduction in mental health contacts over 2020 had a small sample size that may explain the lack of statistical significance in the small reductions recorded within them. Therefore, the findings discussed above need to be interpreted with caution and need to be confirmed on larger samples.

Finally, we found a lower contacts reduction in 2020 for patients living in urban areas (−8.8%) as compared to those living in rural areas (−14.5%). A possible explanation of this difference could be related to the fact that people living in rural areas are likely to experience worse mental health conditions than urban populations due to poorer access to mental health services and lower levels of psychological support (Gardiner et al., Reference Gardiner, Bishop, Churilov, Collins, O'Donnell and Coleman2020; Moon and Moon, Reference Moon and Moon2020).

When comparing the trends of different kinds of contacts in 2020, we found clear evidence that the most important decrease regarded rehabilitation interventions and the day-care activities, confirming what already emerged from the literature (Carpiniello et al., Reference Carpiniello, Tusconi, Zanalda, Di Sciascio and Di Giannantonio2020). This is an expected finding as in Veneto regional legislation required that day-care centres should have been totally closed over the first six months following the pandemic onset. This decision was taken as activities within day-care centres are delivered in groups, with possible greater difficulties in maintaining the prescribed safety distance (D'Agostino et al., Reference D'Agostino, Demartini, Cavallotti and Gambini2020). Furthermore, they include manual, artistic and expressive activities, that are difficult to be delivered through telemedicine (or telerehabilitation). On the contrary, some services (e.g., outpatient care or multi-professional assessments) may allow an easier respect of the interpersonal safety distances and they are easier to be delivered by online devices (Kuzman et al., Reference Kuzman, Vahip, Fiorillo, Beezhold, Pinto da Costa, Skugarevsky, Dom, Pajevic, Peles, Mohr, Kleinberg, Chkonia, Balazs, Flannery, Mazaliauskiene, Chihai, Samochowiec, Cozman, Mihajlovic, Izakova, Arango and Goorwod2021).

Moreover, our data showed that social and support interventions were the category with the lowest decline between the two years considered. This finding is consistent with the perception of psychiatric patients as more fragile than the general population during pandemic, because of the common presence of previous social, economic and work difficulties (Diaz et al., Reference Diaz, Baweja, Bonatakis and Baweja2021). Then, this was a plausible effort, made by mental health services all over the country, to support this vulnerable population, through an increase in social and support interventions. Finally, the provision of some services has undergone a reorganisation, going to change the definition and subsequent classification in the PCR (e.g., in 2019 the personal delivery of psychotropic medication to the more difficult to treat patients was mainly carried out within mental health care facilities and thus recorded as ‘outpatient care’, whereas in 2020 this kind of service was frequently provided at patients’ home and thus registered as ‘social and support intervention’).

By using regression analysis, we found that most of the reduction observed in the number of contacts in 2020 was attributable to the lockdown period; in other words, the lockdown led to an estimated effect of reduction in the global number of contacts with the CMHSs considered of about one-third. That means that the hardest period of pandemic has therefore severely limited the access to mental health care for patients in need. The only exception to this trend was social and supportive interventions: they showed an estimated effect of increase, both during lockdown and intermediate restrictions periods. One possible reason for this finding might be that, as the pandemic progressed, there might have been an increase in social and administrative issues in the population, thus increasing the number of patients who looked for help from CMHSs in managing them in the second part of 2020 (period of intermediate restrictions). Another possible consideration is that, during the period of intermediate restrictions, there might have been fewer barriers in the access to services, thanks to a greater availability of personal protective equipment and to a prompt reorganisation of the services (Fagiolini et al., Reference Fagiolini, Cuomo and Frank2020). That may explain both the stronger estimated effect of increase attributed to intermediate restrictions on social and supportive interventions (e.g., allowing to gradually restart interventions like home visits), and the lack of statistical significance of their estimated effect on the other types of contacts.

Caution is required in interpreting our findings, and some important methodological limitations, should be acknowledged. First, our study could be affected by information bias because the dataset was collected by different teams of psychiatrists. In fact, we found some missing data. Second, due to the structure of the dataset, it was not possible to isolate the variable ‘telematics contacts’, which would have given significant contributions to the interpretation of the data. Due to the nature of the data collected, important clinical information regarding the severity of the cases considered and the combined effects of the pandemic on the other health care services are also lacking, again limiting our possibility to draw conclusions from the data. Third, we were unable to explore the clinical characteristics of children and adolescents (<18 years) on changes in mental health contacts occurring over the two years considered. Finally, our study was conducted in a single Mental Health Department, which limits the generalisability of our results to other contexts. Despite these limitations commonly affected the broad field of retrospective epidemiological studies, future studies should consider these lacking to provide more relevant clinical evidence.

Despite these limitations, our study has important implications. Our findings describe the trend of mental health utilisation during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, thanks to an extremely reliable routine dataset. Despite access to community mental health care during a pandemic remains problematic, the community mental health system in the Verona catchment area has shown to be able to support more vulnerable and severely ill patients, by maintaining continuity of contact and day-by-day support through social and supportive interventions. One significant aspect is that we used an index (CSI) that is available for most countries around the world (Hale et al., Reference Hale, Angrist, Goldszmidt, Kira, Petherick, Phillips, Webster, Cameron-Blake, Hallas, Majumdar and Tatlow2021). This could facilitate similar studies in other countries and their comparison with our local data. Moreover, a complex statistical methodology was applied: the difference-in-differences allowed to reduce confounding factors and thus to estimate the effect of pandemic restrictions more precisely. Finally, there is a need for more studies on this topic, by e.g. correlating changes in access to CMHSs with those in mental health emergency access, which could better reflect the burden of COVID-19 pandemic both on general population and on psychiatric patients. Future studies could also provide information on the long-term effects of COVID-19 pandemic on mental health and well-being, and on its consequent increase of mental health services utilisation and changes in diagnostic casemix.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045796023000100.

Data

Data of the present study will be made available upon motivated request.

Acknowledgements

None.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflict of interest

None.

Ethical standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000.

References

Amaddeo, F, Beecham, J, Bonizzato, P, Fenyo, A, Knapp, M and Tansella, M (1997) The use of a case register to evaluate the costs of psychiatric care. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 95, 189198.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amaddeo, F, Zambello, F, Tansella, M and Thornicroft, G (2001) Accessibility and pathways to psychiatric care in a community-based mental health system. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 36, 500507.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amaddeo, F, Barbui, C, Perini, G, Biggeri, A and Tansella, M (2007) Avoidable mortality of psychiatric patients in an area with a community-based system of mental health care. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 115, 320325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aragona, M, Barbato, A, Cavani, A, Costanzo, G and Mirisola, C (2020) Negative impacts of COVID-19 lockdown on mental health service access and follow-up adherence for immigrants and individuals in socio-economic difficulties. Public Health 186, 5256.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carpiniello, B, Tusconi, M, Zanalda, E, Di Sciascio, G and Di Giannantonio, M (2020) Psychiatry during the Covid-19 pandemic: a survey on mental health departments in Italy. BMC Psychiatry 20, 593.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cochran, WG (1954) Some methods of strengthening the common x2 tests. International Biometric Society 10, 417451.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cristofalo, D, Bonetto, C, Ballarin, M, Amaddeo, F, Ruggeri, M, Nosè, M and Barbui, C (2018). Access to and use of psychiatric services by migrants resettled in Northern Italy. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health 20, 13091316.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
D'Agostino, A, Demartini, B, Cavallotti, S and Gambini, O (2020) Mental health services in Italy during the COVID-19 outbreak. The Lancet Psychiatry 7, 385387.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de Girolamo, G, Cerveri, G, Clerici, M, Monzani, E, Spinogatti, F, Starace, F, Tura, G and Vita, A (2020) Mental health in the coronavirus disease 2019 emergency—The Italian response. JAMA Psychiatry 77, 974.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Diaz, A, Baweja, R, Bonatakis, JK and Baweja, R (2021) Global health disparities in vulnerable populations of psychiatric patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. World Journal of Psychiatry 11, 94108.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dijkstra, L and Poelman, H (2014) A Harmonised Definition of Cities and Rural Areas: The new Degree of Urbanisation. European Commission. Available at https://ec.europa.eu/regional_policy/sources/docgener/work/2014_01_new_urban.pdf.Google Scholar
Fagiolini, A, Cuomo, A and Frank, E (2020) COVID-19 Diary from a psychiatry department in Italy. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 81, 3909. https://doi.org/10.4088/JCP.20com13357CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fiorillo, A, Sampogna, G, Giallonardo, V, Del Vecchio, V, Luciano, M, Albert, U, Carmassi, C, Carrà, G, Cirulli, F, Dell'Osso, B, Nanni, MG, Pompili, M, Sani, G, Tortorella, A and Volpe, U (2020) Effects of the lockdown on the mental health of the general population during the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy: results from the COMET collaborative network. European Psychiatry 63, e87.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gardiner, FW, Bishop, L, Churilov, L, Collins, N, O'Donnell, J and Coleman, M (2020) Mental health care for rural and remote Australians during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. Air Medical Journal 39, 516519.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gentile, A, Torales, J, O'Higgins, M, Figueredo, P, Castaldelli-Maia, JM, De Berardis, D, Petito, A, Bellomo, A and Ventriglio, A (2022) Phone-based outpatients’ follow-up in mental health centers during the COVID-19 quarantine. International Journal of Social Psychiatry 68, 129133.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Governo Italiano (2020) Covid-19. Available at https://www.governo.it/it/coronavirus.Google Scholar
Graetz, V, Rechel, B, Groot, W, Norredam, M and Pavlova, M (2017) Utilization of health care services by migrants in Europe—A systematic literature review. British Medical Bulletin 121, 518.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hale, T, Angrist, N, Goldszmidt, R, Kira, B, Petherick, A, Phillips, T, Webster, S, Cameron-Blake, E, Hallas, L, Majumdar, S and Tatlow, H (2021) A global panel database of pandemic policies (Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker). Nature Human Behaviour 5, 529538.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Higgins, JP, Ramsay, C, Reeves, BC, Deeks, JJ, Shea, B, Valentine, JC, Tugwell, P and Wells, G (2013) Issues relating to study design and risk of bias when including non-randomized studies in systematic reviews on the effects of interventions. Research Synthesis Methods 4, 1225.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Istituto Superiore di Sanità (2020) Epidemia COVID-19, Aggiornamento nazionale: 16 aprile 2020. Available at https://www.epicentro.iss.it/coronavirus/bollettino/Bollettino-sorveglianza-integrata-COVID-19_16-giugno-2021.pdf.Google Scholar
Kuzman, MR, Vahip, S, Fiorillo, A, Beezhold, J, Pinto da Costa, M, Skugarevsky, O, Dom, G, Pajevic, I, Peles, AM, Mohr, P, Kleinberg, A, Chkonia, E, Balazs, J, Flannery, W, Mazaliauskiene, R, Chihai, J, Samochowiec, J, Cozman, D, Mihajlovic, G, Izakova, L, Arango, C and Goorwod, P (2021) Mental health services during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe: results from the EPA Ambassadors Survey and implications for clinical practice. European Psychiatry 64, e41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasalvia, A, Amaddeo, F, Porru, S, Carta, A, Tardivo, S, Bovo, C, Ruggeri, M and Bonetto, C (2021) Levels of burn-out among healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic and their associated factors: a cross-sectional study in a tertiary hospital of a highly burdened area of north-east Italy. BMJ Open 11, e045127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasalvia, A, Rigon, G, Rugiu, C, Negri, C, Del Zotti, F, Amaddeo, F and Bonetto, C (2022) The psychological impact of COVID-19 among primary care physicians in the province of Verona, Italy: a cross-sectional study during the first pandemic wave. Family Practice 39, 6573.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liang, L, Ren, H, Cao, R, Hu, Y, Qin, Z, Li, C and Mei, S (2020) The effect of COVID-19 on youth mental health. Psychiatric Quarterly 91, 841852.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Meloni, S, de Girolamo, G and Rossi, R (2020) COVID-19 e servizi di salute mentale in Europa. Epidemiologia & Prevenzione 44(5-6 Suppl 2), 383393.Google Scholar
Moccia, L, Janiri, D, Giuseppin, G, Agrifoglio, B, Monti, L, Mazza, M, Caroppo, E, Fiorillo, A, Sani, G, Di Nicola, M and Janiri, L (2020) Reduced hedonic tone and emotion dysregulation predict depressive symptoms severity during the COVID-19 outbreak: an observational study on the Italian general population. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, 255.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Monteleone, AM, Cascino, G, Marciello, F, Abbate-Daga, G, Baiano, M, Balestrieri, M, Barone, E, Bertelli, S, Carpiniello, B, Castellini, G, Corrivetti, G, De Giorgi, S, Favaro, A, Gramaglia, C, Marzola, E, Meneguzzo, P, Monaco, F, Oriani, MG, Pinna, F, Rania, M, Redaelli, CA, Renna, C, Ricca, V, Salvo, P, Baldissera, E, Segura-Garcia, C, Todisco, P, Volpe, U, Zeppegno, P and Monteleone, P (2021) Risk and resilience factors for specific and general psychopathology worsening in people with Eating Disorders during COVID-19 pandemic: a retrospective Italian multicentre study. Eating and Weight Disorders – Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity 26, 24432452.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moon, J and Moon, H (2020) Mental health care in rural and remote areas necessitate greater attention during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rural and Remote Health 20, 6404. https://doi.org/10.22605/RRH6404Google ScholarPubMed
Moreno, C, Wykes, T, Galderisi, S, Nordentoft, M, Crossley, N, Jones, N, Cannon, M, Correll, CU, Byrne, L, Carr, S, Chen, EYH, Gorwood, P, Johnson, S, Kärkkäinen, H, Krystal, JH, Lee, J, Lieberman, J, López-Jaramillo, C, Männikkö, M, Philips, MR, Uchida, H, Vieta, E, Vita, A and Arango, C (2020) How mental health care should change as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Lancet Psychiatry 7, 813824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Naqvi, H (2020) Mental health in the aftermath of COVID-19: a new normal. Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association 70(Suppl 3), S141S144.Google Scholar
Nicholas, J, Bell, IH, Thompson, A, Valentine, L, Simsir, P, Sheppard, H and Adams, S (2021) Implementation lessons from the transition to telehealth during COVID-19: a survey of clinicians and young people from youth mental health services. Psychiatry Research 299, 113848.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pignon, B, Gourevitch, R, Tebeka, S, Dubertret, C, Cardot, H, Masson, VD-L, Trebalag, A-K, Barruel, D, Yon, L, Hemery, F, Loric, M, Rabu, C, Pelissolo, A, Leboyer, M, Schürhoff, F and Pham-Scottez, A (2020) Dramatic reduction of psychiatric emergency consultations during lockdown linked to COVID-19 in Paris and suburbs. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences 74, 557559.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
StataCorp (2021) Stata Statistical Software: Release 17. College Station, TX: StataCorp LLC.Google Scholar
Talevi, D, Socci, V, Carai, M, Carnaghi, G, Faleri, S, Trebbi, E, Bernardo, AD, Capelli, F and Pacitti, F (2020) Mental health outcomes of the Covid-19 pandemic. Rivista Di Psichiatria 8, 137144.Google Scholar
Tansella, M and Burti, L (2003) Integrating evaluative research and community-based mental health care in Verona, Italy. British Journal of Psychiatry 183, 167169.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vahratian, A, Blumberg, SJ, Terlizzi, EP and Schiller, JS (2021) Symptoms of anxiety or depressive disorder and use of mental health care among adults during the COVID-19 pandemic—United States, August 2020–February 2021. MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 70, 490494.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Health Organization (1992) The ICD-10 classification of mental and behavioural disorders: clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines. World Health Organization. https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/37958Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020) WHO releases guidelines to help countries maintain essential health services during the COVID-19 pandemic. Available at https://www.who.int/news/item/30-03-2020-who-releases-guidelines-to-help-countries-maintain-essential-health-services-during-the-covid-19-pandemic.Google Scholar
Zhong, B-L, Zhou, D-Y, He, M-F, Li, Y, Li, W-T, Ng, CH, Xiang, Y-T and Chiu, HF-K (2020) Mental health problems, needs, and service use among people living within and outside Wuhan during the COVID-19 epidemic in China. Annals of Translational Medicine 8, 13921392.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Comparison between numbers of patients who had access to mental health services in 2019 and 2020 by socio-demographic and diagnostic characteristics

Figure 1

Table 2. Comparison between numbers of MH contacts registered in 2019 and 2020 by type of contacts

Figure 2

Table 3. Estimated effect of lockdown and restrictions by type of contact

Figure 3

Fig. 1. Estimated effect of lockdown and restrictions by type of contactNotes: Incidence Rate Ratio on X axis, levels of stringency on Y axis.

Supplementary material: File

Prina et al. supplementary material

Table S1

Download Prina et al. supplementary material(File)
File 21.5 KB