Imagine having a serious kidney condition and needing urgent help. Now imagine that help becomes harder to get or less effective during a global crisis. A large review of emergency records in South Korea looked at exactly this situation for adults with end-stage kidney disease. They compared emergency visits and health outcomes during the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021 against the two years before, from 2018 to 2019. The data came from over 159,000 emergency department visits recorded in a national system.
The numbers tell a worrying story. During the pandemic, these patients were more likely to be hospitalized and more likely to die in the short term than they were before the outbreak. The risk of hospitalization rose slightly, and the risk of death also increased. At the same time, the frequency of emergency visits went up, suggesting people were seeking urgent care more often or that their conditions were worsening faster.
There was one bright spot: the distribution of patients across different hospital service levels improved during the outbreak. However, the increase in hospitalizations and deaths is a serious signal that the pandemic created extra danger for this specific group. This study does not prove the virus caused every single bad outcome, but it shows that the crisis period was linked to worse results for people with kidney failure. These findings can help doctors and leaders prepare better strategies for the next public health emergency.