Ashleigh R Tuite1, Victoria Ng2, Erin Rees2, David Fisman1, Annelies Wilder-Smith3, Kamran Khan4, Isaac I Bogoch5. 1. Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. 2. Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada. 3. Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Section of Sustainable Health, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden. 4. BlueDot, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. 5. Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada; Divisions of General Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto M5G 2C4, ON, Canada. Electronic address: isaac.bogoch@uhn.ca.
In December, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) emerged in Wuhan, China, causing a pandemic that continues to spread globally. 86 countries have reported cases. As of March 6, 2020, Egypt has reported three cases of COVID-19; however, at least 14 cases have been exported from Egypt to four countries. The burden of infection in Egypt, therefore, might be substantially larger than reported. We estimated the potential burden of COVID-19 in Egypt using the approach of Fraser and colleagues.We investigated two scenarios: (1) all exported cases, considered to be independent (n=14); and (2) all exported cases minus travellers who had visited multiple countries and possibly linked cases (n=5). In the second scenario, linked cases included six cases exported to France, all of whom appeared to be from the same tour group and so were counted as a single case. Similarly, the two exported cases to the USA, a husband and wife, were counted as a single case, and five cases exported to Canada were counted as three cases because two cases were linked to a third case. One exported case to Taiwan also travelled to the United Arab Emirates, where COVID-19 has been reported, and so was not counted in the second scenario.We used travel data from the International Air Transport Association, which accounts for over 90% of the world's travel flights and traveller volumes. In February, 2019, 829 370 international air travellers departed from Egypt. The four countries reporting exported cases were ranked eighth (USA), 13th (France), 31st (Canada), and 40th (Taiwan) for travel volumes and together accounted for 5·1% of outbound air travellers from Egypt. We used data from the UN World Tourism Organization on the average length of stay in Egypt by tourists (11·6 days) and proportion of air travellers who are tourists rather than residents of Egypt (61%) and assumed that COVID-19 had been transmitting in Egypt from Feb 6 to March 6, 2020. Residents were assumed to have a 1-month exposure period. Under the conservative estimate of the COVID-19 burden, in which linked and ambiguous cases were eliminated (ie, scenario 2), we estimated an outbreak size of 19 310 cases (95% CI 6270–45 070) in Egypt. Using all cases, regardless of possible non-independence, we obtained a higher estimate of 51 520 cases (28 170–86 440), but given reports that several Nile tour operators have COVID-19infections, these values might overestimate the burden in Egypt if tourists are preferentially affected and exporting cases. Given this observation, we estimate that the true value is probably closer to the lower end of the CI in the conservative estimate, and probably near 6000 cases.Egypt probably has a large burden of COVID-19 cases that are unreported, and increased clinical capacity for public health might help identify and manage cases. Using the lower bound of our more conservative estimate, this estimate would still represent a substantially greater number of cases than has been officially reported in the country. Additionally, Egypt might be a source of COVID-19 exportation that is not yet accounted for by many public health initiatives.
Authors: Isaac I Bogoch; Alexander Watts; Andrea Thomas-Bachli; Carmen Huber; Moritz U G Kraemer; Kamran Khan Journal: J Travel Med Date: 2020-03-13 Impact factor: 8.490
Authors: Christophe Fraser; Christl A Donnelly; Simon Cauchemez; William P Hanage; Maria D Van Kerkhove; T Déirdre Hollingsworth; Jamie Griffin; Rebecca F Baggaley; Helen E Jenkins; Emily J Lyons; Thibaut Jombart; Wes R Hinsley; Nicholas C Grassly; Francois Balloux; Azra C Ghani; Neil M Ferguson; Andrew Rambaut; Oliver G Pybus; Hugo Lopez-Gatell; Celia M Alpuche-Aranda; Ietza Bojorquez Chapela; Ethel Palacios Zavala; Dulce Ma Espejo Guevara; Francesco Checchi; Erika Garcia; Stephane Hugonnet; Cathy Roth Journal: Science Date: 2009-05-11 Impact factor: 47.728
Authors: Samia A Girgis; Hala M Hafez; Hoda Ezz Elarab; Basma Sherif; Moshira H Sabry; Iman Afifi; Fatma Elzahraa Hassan; Amira Reda; Shaimaa Elsayed; Asmaa Mahmoud; Petra Habeb; Ihab S Habil; Rasha S Hussein; Isis M Mossad; Ossama Mansour; Ashraf Omar; Ayman M Saleh; Mahmoud El-Meteini Journal: PLoS One Date: 2021-07-15 Impact factor: 3.240