| Literature DB >> 20034405 |
Susan J Bondy1, Margaret L Russell, Julie Ml Laflèche, Elizabeth Rea.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Community quarantine is controversial, and the decision to use and prepare for it should be informed by specific quantitative evidence of benefit. Case-study reports on 2002-2004 SARS outbreaks have discussed the role of quarantine in the community in transmission. However, this literature has not yielded quantitative estimates of the reduction in secondary cases attributable to quarantine as would be seen in other areas of health policy and cost-effectiveness analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20034405 PMCID: PMC2808319 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Numbers of index SARS cases* and non-overlapping contacts† associated with index cases.
| Quarantine status | N of SARS index cases with no community contacts | N of SARS index cases with at least one community contact at any level | Group total numbers of community contacts (and secondary cases) by level of contact‡§ | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 267 | 89 | 178 | 7970 (52) | 578 (37) | 3186 (14) | 1258 (1) | 2948 (0) | |
| 65 | 39 | 26 | 528 (4) | 52 (2) | 164 (1) | 297 (1) | 15 (0) | |
| Total | 332 | 128 | 204 | 8498 (56) | 630 (39) | 3483 (15) | 1555 (2) | 2963 (0) |
*Cases of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in the Ontario, Canada, 2003 outbreak. Includes all cases with a final disposition of suspect or probable SARS.
† Also considered, in sensitivity analyses only, were an additional 140 individuals who were potential SARS cases at some point during the outbreak and had at least one community contact, but subsequently did not meet criteria for probable or suspect SARS.
‡ Includes 8,498 community contacts with contact to one SARS case and not a second SARS case within 10 days of exposure to the first within any single 10 day period of exposure.
§ Level of contact: 1 = contact for at least 30 minutes within 1 metre; 2A = same room for ≥ 30 minutes; 2B = same room for <30 minutes or same floor, regardless of duration; level 3 = distant contact only - was in same building or large social network.
Quantitative measures of the impact of quarantine on secondary cases in the community*.
| Analysis approach | Measure of association obtained from model | Variance estimation method | Estimated value of measure of association | p-value | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower limit | Upper limit | |||||
| A) Generalized linear model with binomial error and identity link (additive logistic). Unit of analysis is community contacts, clustered within shared 204 index cases. (N = 8498). | Naïve Secondary Attack Rate Difference (incorporates information only for 204 index cases with one or more community contact; see text) | Asymptotic: | 0.00105 | 0.786 | -0.00665 | 0.00866 |
| B) Canonical Poisson and negative binomial regression with log link functions. Unit of analysis is all index cases. (N = 332). | Beta coefficient | Poisson, asymptotic: | -1.15209 | 0.026 | -2.16906 | -0.13511 |
| Secondary Case Count Ratio (SCCR) (SCCR = exponentiated Beta for quarantine) | Poisson, asymptotic: | 0.31598 | 0.026 | 0.11428 | 0.87362 | |
| C) Generalized linear model with Poisson error term and identity link function, yielding an additive effect measure. | Secondary Case Count Difference (SCCD).(SCCD = Beta coefficient for quarantine) | Poisson, asymptotic: | -0.13322 | 0.001 | -0.21346 | -0.05298 |
| Unit of analysis is all index cases. (N = 332). | Number needed to quarantine (NNQ). (NNQ = 1/|SCCD|, above) | Poisson, asymptotic: | 7.50647 | 0.001 | 4.68469 | 18.87661 |
* Data from 332 index community-living probable or suspect Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) cases and 8,498 associated community contacts. Ontario, Canada, SARS outbreak, 2003.
† Bootstrapping used to obtain variance estimate; point estimate fixed from corresponding asymptotic model.
Assessment of whether number and level of contacts mediate the effect of quarantine on secondary cases.
| Term in adjusted model* (contrasts with crude model B, in Table 2) | Secondary Case Count Ratio (SCCR) | p-value under large sample assumption and using bootstrapped variance estimate (in italics) | 95% confidence interval under large sample assumption and using bootstrapped variance estimate (in italics) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower limit | Upper limit | |||
| Quarantine (v. no) | 0.3524498 | 0.046 | 0.1266103 | 0.9811279 |
| Total contacts (continuous†) | 0.9999988 | 0.657 | 0.9999937 | 1.000004 |
| Total close contacts (continuous) | 1.061969 | 0.005 | 1.018544 | 1.107246 |
* Poisson regression for secondary case count, adjusting for total and close contacts.
†Continuous term transformed by taking the square root of raw data; used to achieve normally-distributed residuals.