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Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Chronic Disease Care in India, China, Hong Kong, Korea, and Vietnam

Version 2 2024-06-06, 12:28
Version 1 2023-02-23, 04:44
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 12:28 authored by K Singh, Y Xin, Y Xiao, J Quan, D Kim, TPL Nguyen, D Kondal, X Yan, G Li, CS Ng, H Kang, H Minh Nam, S Mohan, LL Yan, C Shi, J Chen, H Thi Hong Hanh, V Mohan, S Kong, K Eggleston, D Prabhakaran, N Tandon, KV Narayan, MK Ali, A Ranjit Mohan, D Mohan, S Jagannathan, NS Venkateshmurthy, P Jarhyan, E Gong, S Xiong, X Chen, T Østbye, EK Duman, BJ Cowling, TWY Ng, J Xiao, GM Leung, A Chang, R Liang
This study aims to provide evidence on how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted chronic disease care in diverse settings across Asia. Cross-sectional surveys were conducted to assess the health, social, and economic consequences of the pandemic in India, China, Hong Kong, Korea, and Vietnam using standardized questionnaires. Overall, 5672 participants with chronic conditions were recruited from five countries. The mean age of the participants ranged from 55.9 to 69.3 years. A worsened economic status during the COVID-19 pandemic was reported by 19% to 59% of the study participants. Increased difficulty in accessing care was reported by 8% to 24% of participants, except Vietnam: 1.6%. The worsening of diabetes symptoms was reported by 5.6% to 14.6% of participants, except Vietnam: 3%. In multivariable regression analyses, increasing age, female participants, and worsened economic status were suggestive of increased difficulty in access to care, but these associations mostly did not reach statistical significance. In India and China, rural residence, worsened economic status and self-reported hypertension were statistically significantly associated with increased difficulty in access to care or worsening of diabetes symptoms. These findings suggest that the pandemic disproportionately affected marginalized and rural populations in Asia, negatively affecting population health beyond those directly suffering from COVID-19.

History

Journal

Asia-Pacific Journal of Public Health

Volume

34

Pagination

392-400

Location

China

ISSN

1010-5395

eISSN

1941-2479

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

SAGE Publications