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. 2021 Sep 17;116(3):e213. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2021.07.581

FERTILITY PRESERVATION COUNSELING AND FAMILY PLANNING PRIOR TO AND DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC

Jennifer Chae-Kim 1, Larisa Gavrilova-Jordan 2, Tongil TI Kim 3, Gordon Wright Bates 1
PMCID: PMC8446871

Objective

The delivery of women’s healthcare has changed drastically with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. This has undoubtedly created significant uncertainties for those interested in conception counseling. In particular, fertility preservation (FP) is time-sensitive and often emergent or urgent for patients undergoing gonadotoxic therapy. ASRM provided close monitoring and guidelines during this time of crisis. Our objective was to examine the effect of the pandemic on fertility preservation counseling and family planning.

Materials and Methods

Claims data from Symphony Health, one of the largest databases of patient-level data on more than 280 million patients in the US, was examined from May 1, 2019 to February 28, 2021. Reproductive-aged women were included in the analysis. March - April 2020 was used as a threshold for when healthcare restrictions became widespread. We compared 10 months prior to the pandemic (May 2019 - Feb 2020) and the same time period after the start of the pandemic (May 2020 - Feb 2021). Fertility preservation counseling (Z31.62), FP procedures (Z31.84), and general family planning counseling (Z31.61 and Z31.69) were identified using ICD-10 codes. Data analysis was conducted in Stata, version 16.1, using 2-sided t-tests with significance set at P < 0.05.

Results

In our search, 14,491 FP consultations, 15,049 FP procedures, and 359,218 family planning encounters were identified. The mean age of women undergoing FP and family planning counseling decreased significantly when comparing prior to and during the pandemic (31.9±7.6 vs 31.4±7.1 years, and 32.2±6.1 vs 31.6±6 years, respectively). The average age for patients who underwent a FP procedure (33.5±6.5 vs 33±6.4 years) was also statistically different. Time series plot shows a substantial drop in focal variables in March - April 2020. Interestingly, all three variables quickly recovered to pre-pandemic baseline by June 2020. FP consultations increased from 542 encounters per month pre-pandemic vs 737 per month during the pandemic, P < 0.001. Similarly, FP procedures increased from 640 to 781, P=0.02. In contrast, family planning did not change significantly (16,376 vs 17,552, P=0.21).

Conclusions

FP counseling and procedures increased during the pandemic, despite healthcare restrictions and lockdown measures. On the other hand, family planning encounters did not change. Despite barriers to care related to the pandemic, time-sensitive fertility preservation counseling and procedures continued to be utilized. Our findings also reflect ASRM recommendations regarding suspension of non-emergent fertility management at the onset of the pandemic, and continuity of urgent services afterwards.

Impact Statement

FP counseling and treatment are emergent services that were not negatively impacted by pandemic-related healthcare restrictions. Under ASRM guidelines, FP continued at an increased pace. This experience shows that, under close guidance, emergent or urgent services may be continued during a public health crisis.

P-249 6:30 AM Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Footnotes

SUPPORT: None.


Articles from Fertility and Sterility are provided here courtesy of Elsevier

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