| Literature DB >> 15200808 |
L Clifford McDonald1, Andrew E Simor, Ih-Jen Su, Susan Maloney, Marianna Ofner, Kow-Tong Chen, James F Lando, Allison McGeer, Min-Ling Lee, Daniel B Jernigan.
Abstract
The healthcare setting was important in the early spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in both Toronto and Taiwan. Healthcare workers, patients, and visitors were at increased risk for infection. Nonetheless, the ability of individual SARS patients to transmit disease was quite variable. Unrecognized SARS case-patients were a primary source of transmission, and early detection and intervention were important to limit spread. Strict adherence to infection control precautions was essential in containing outbreaks. In addition, grouping patients into cohorts and limiting access to SARS patients minimized exposure opportunities. Given the difficulty in implementing several of these measures, control measures were frequently adapted to the acuity of SARS care and level of transmission within facilities. Although these conclusions are based only on a retrospective analysis of events, applying the experiences of Toronto and Taiwan to SARS preparedness planning efforts will likely minimize future transmission within healthcare facilities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15200808 PMCID: PMC3323242 DOI: 10.3201/eid1005.030791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics of the SARS outbreak in the greater Toronto area and Taiwan, March–June 2003a
| Characteristic | GTA, no. (%) | Taiwan, no. (%)b |
|---|---|---|
| Total cases | 375 | NA |
| Probable | 247 (66) | 668 |
| Suspected | 128 (34) | NA |
| Deaths | 44 (12) | 72 (11) |
| Healthcare related | 271 (72) | 370 (55) |
| Healthcare workers | 164 (44) | 120 (18) |
| Patients or visitors | 107 (28) | 256 (38) |
| Hospitals with hospitalized SARS patients | 23 | 84 |
| Hospitals with SARS transmission | 10 (43) | 8 (10) |
| Hospitals that closed wards or an emergency room | 10 (43) | NA |
aSARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome; GTA, greater Toronto area; NA, data not available bPercentage expresses proportion of all probable SARS cases
Figure 1Number of probable cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome, by location and date of illness onset—Toronto and Taiwan, February 23–June 15, 2003.
Figure 2A, evaluation center for severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in Toronto, demonstrating spatial separation of chairs in waiting area intended to reduce patient-to-patient transmission. B, evaluation center for SARS in Taiwan, demonstrating triage screening of a patient by a healthcare worker wearing personal protective equipment.