The number of adolescents admitted to the hospital for severe illness from eating disorders increased significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic, new research suggests.
At one center, the number of hospital admissions among adolescents with eating disorders more than doubled during the first 12 months of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the study.
The 125 hospitalizations among patients ages 10-23 at Michigan Medicine in those 12 months reflect a significant increase over previous years. Admissions related to eating disorders during the same timeframe between 2017 and 2019 averaged 56 per year.
“These findings emphasize how profoundly the pandemic has affected young people, who experienced school closures, cancelled extracurricular activities, and social isolation. Their entire worlds were turned upside down overnight,” says Alana Otto, an adolescent medicine physician at the and lead author of the paper in the journal Pediatrics.
“For adolescents with eating disorders and those at risk for eating disorders, these significant disruptions may have worsened or triggered symptoms.”
Changes in day-to-day life
The numbers may represent only a fraction of those with eating disorders the pandemic affects, researchers say, as they only included young people whose severe illness led to hospitalization.
“Our study suggests that the negative mental health effects of the pandemic could be particularly profound among adolescents with eating disorders,” Otto says. “But our data doesn’t capture the entire picture. These could be really conservative estimates.”
The study also suggests the rate of admissions at the institution steadily increased over time during the first year of the pandemic. The highest rates of admissions per month occurred between nine and 12 months after the pandemic began, with rates continuing to climb when the study period ended in March 2021.
Restrictive eating disorders include anorexia nervosa and may be marked by dietary restriction, excessive exercise, and/or or purging to lose weight.
Researchers have linked genetics, psychological factors, and social influences to developing eating disorders. Adolescents with low self-esteem or depressive symptoms are at especially high risk.
Changes to adolescents’ day-to-day lives during the pandemic, such as school closures and cancellation of organized sports, may also disrupt routines related to eating and exercise, and be an impetus for developing unhealthy eating behaviors among those already at risk, Otto says.
“A stressful event may lead to the development of symptoms in a young person at risk for eating disorders,” she says.
“During the pandemic, the absence of routine, disruptions in daily activities, and a sense of a loss of control are all possible contributing factors. For many adolescents, when everything feels out of control, the one thing they feel they can control is their eating.”
Less physical activity
Some patients also reported that limitations in playing sports and other physical activities made them worry about gaining weight, leading to unhealthy dieting or exercise. Increased social media use during the pandemic may also expose young people to more negative messaging about body image and weight.
There could be indirect connections to the pandemic as well, Otto says. For example, an adolescent with significant eating disorder symptoms and severe malnutrition may have only sought medical attention when they moved back in with their parents after their college closed unexpectedly during the shutdowns.
Another potential factor may be delayed care for non-COVID-19 conditions, including eating disorders, and fewer in-person visits as part of measures to reduce transmission risks, authors note.
Limited confidentiality
Adolescents with eating disorders may be particularly affected by reduced availability of in-person care, Otto says. Assessment and management of patients with malnutrition generally requires measuring weight and vital signs and may involve a full physical examination or lab tests.
Confidentiality, a critical component of clinical care for adolescents, may also be limited in virtual settings.
While the study is limited by its small sample size, it comes as international reports indicate increases in both outpatient referrals to child and adolescent eating disorder services and inpatient admissions related to anorexia nervosa among adolescents, Otto says.
“Although our findings reflect the experience of a single institution, they’re in line with emerging reports of the pandemic’s potential to have profound negative effects on the mental and physical health of adolescents across the globe.”
“Adolescents may be particularly vulnerable to negative effects of societal upheaval related to the pandemic and to developing eating disorders during the COVID-19 era. Providers who care for adolescents and teens should be attuned to these risks and monitor patients for signs and symptoms of an eating disorder.”
Access to care
Patient demographics were similar before and during the pandemic, according to the study. But patients admitted during the COVID-19 pandemic were less likely than those admitted prior to the pandemic to have public insurance, something that should be studied further, the authors say.
Otto notes that for adolescents with eating disorders, medical admission is often the beginning, not the end, of treatment, which can be a long journey. Among the biggest barriers to care are a shortage of qualified providers and insurance coverage gaps.
“Access to care was already limited before the pandemic and now we’re seeing an increased demand for these services. As we see a wave of young people coming to the hospital for urgent medical concerns related to eating disorders, we need to be prepared to continue to care for them after they leave the hospital,” Otto says.
“I’m hopeful that as adolescents are able to go back to school and engage with friends and activities that are meaningful to them, we will see admissions decrease,” she adds. “But it takes time for these symptoms to develop and eating disorders generally last for months or years.
“We expect to see downstream effects of the pandemic on adolescents and young people for some time.”
Source: University of Michigan
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This article originally appeared on Futurity