Association of Public Health Interventions With the Epidemiology of the COVID-19 Outbreak in Wuhan, China.
An Pan,Li Liu,Chaolong Wang,Huan Guo,Xingjie Hao,Qi Wang,Jiao Huang,Na He,Hongjie Yu,Xihong Lin,Sheng Wei,Tangchun Wu +11 more
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TLDR
A series of multifaceted public health interventions was temporally associated with improved control of the COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan, China, and may inform public health policy in other countries and regions.Abstract:
Importance Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has become a pandemic, and it is unknown whether a combination of public health interventions can improve control of the outbreak. Objective To evaluate the association of public health interventions with the epidemiological features of the COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan by 5 periods according to key events and interventions. Design, Setting, and Participants In this cohort study, individual-level data on 32 583 laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases reported between December 8, 2019, and March 8, 2020, were extracted from the municipal Notifiable Disease Report System, including patients’ age, sex, residential location, occupation, and severity classification. Exposures Nonpharmaceutical public health interventions includingcordons sanitaire, traffic restriction, social distancing, home confinement, centralized quarantine, and universal symptom survey. Main Outcomes and Measures Rates of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 infections (defined as the number of cases per day per million people), across age, sex, and geographic locations were calculated across 5 periods: December 8 to January 9 (no intervention), January 10 to 22 (massive human movement due to the Chinese New Year holiday), January 23 to February 1 (cordons sanitaire, traffic restriction and home quarantine), February 2 to 16 (centralized quarantine and treatment), and February 17 to March 8 (universal symptom survey). The effective reproduction number of SARS-CoV-2 (an indicator of secondary transmission) was also calculated over the periods. Results Among 32 583 laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases, the median patient age was 56.7 years (range, 0-103; interquartile range, 43.4-66.8) and 16 817 (51.6%) were women. The daily confirmed case rate peaked in the third period and declined afterward across geographic regions and sex and age groups, except for children and adolescents, whose rate of confirmed cases continued to increase. The daily confirmed case rate over the whole period in local health care workers (130.5 per million people [95% CI, 123.9-137.2]) was higher than that in the general population (41.5 per million people [95% CI, 41.0-41.9]). The proportion of severe and critical cases decreased from 53.1% to 10.3% over the 5 periods. The severity risk increased with age: compared with those aged 20 to 39 years (proportion of severe and critical cases, 12.1%), elderly people (≥80 years) had a higher risk of having severe or critical disease (proportion, 41.3%; risk ratio, 3.61 [95% CI, 3.31-3.95]) while younger people ( Conclusions and Relevance A series of multifaceted public health interventions was temporally associated with improved control of the COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan, China. These findings may inform public health policy in other countries and regions.read more
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TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review and meta-analysis report the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies among nurses globally, and the results were presented using forest plots and summary prevalence and variance was estimated using a random effects model.
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Asv Shah,Asv Shah,Rachael Wood,Ciara Gribben,David H Caldwell,J. L. Bishop,Amanda Weir,Sharon Kennedy,Martin Rw,Alison Smith-Palmer,David S. Goldberg,Jim McMenamin,Colin Fischbacher,Chris Robertson,Sharon J. Hutchinson,Paul M. McKeigue,C Helen,David A. McAllister +17 more
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