
A new study suggests that the COVID-19 pandemic had a direct negative impact on the diagnosis of cardiovascular disease around the world.
“The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has adversely affected diagnosis and treatment of noncommunicable diseases,” the authors wrote in the study, publishing in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. “Its effects on delivery of diagnostic care for cardiovascular disease, which remains the leading cause of death worldwide, have not been quantified.”
Based on data from the International Atomic Energy Agency, which conducted a worldwide surgery of alterations in cardiovascular diagnostic procedures and volumes. The researchers looked at invasive and noninvasive cardiac testing volumes between March and April 2020, and compared them with March and April 2019. They ended up gathering surveys from 909 inpatient centers performing cardiac diagnostic procedures.