| Literature DB >> 32855428 |
Qulu Zheng1, Forrest K Jones1, Sarah V Leavitt2, Lawson Ung3, Alain B Labrique4, David H Peters4, Elizabeth C Lee1, Andrew S Azman5.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has sparked unprecedented public health and social measures (PHSM) by national and local governments, including border restrictions, school closures, mandatory facemask use and stay at home orders. Quantifying the effectiveness of these interventions in reducing disease transmission is key to rational policy making in response to the current and future pandemics. In order to estimate the effectiveness of these interventions, detailed descriptions of their timelines, scale and scope are needed. The Health Intervention Tracking for COVID-19 (HIT-COVID) is a curated and standardized global database that catalogues the implementation and relaxation of COVID-19 related PHSM. With a team of over 200 volunteer contributors, we assembled policy timelines for a range of key PHSM aimed at reducing COVID-19 risk for the national and first administrative levels (e.g. provinces and states) globally, including details such as the degree of implementation and targeted populations. We continue to maintain and adapt this database to the changing COVID-19 landscape so it can serve as a resource for researchers and policymakers alike.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32855428 PMCID: PMC7453020 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-020-00610-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Brief descriptions of selected public health and social measures (PHSM) captured in the Health Intervention Tracking for COVID-19 (HIT-COVID) database.
| Domain | Interventions | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Restrictions of travel and movement | Border closures | Control of population movement into the administrative unit |
| Limiting movement within administrative unit borders | Closures of towns, cities, and roads, effectively limiting movement within an administrative unit | |
| Household confinement | Restricting individuals to their place of residence, including curfews, except when fulfilling essential needs | |
| Social and physical distancing measures | Closures of public institutions and public areas | Closures of schools, offices, transportation, and public spaces such as parks |
| Closures of non-public institutions and areas | Closures of office, leisure, entertainment, religious venues, restaurants, retail stores, nursing homes, and long-term care facilities | |
| Limiting gatherings | Limits on the size of social gatherings | |
| Surveillance and response measures | Symptom screening at borders | Implementation of symptom screening upon arrival at an administrative unit |
| Testing individuals | Testing individuals based on pre-specified symptom criteria for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 Testing individuals irrespective of symptoms | |
| Contact tracing | Tracing and monitoring contacts of identified cases | |
| Quarantine and home-isolation | Separating and restricting movements of individuals who may have been exposed (quarantine) or have symptoms and/or confirmed infection (isolation) | |
| Other measures | Military and police deployment | Deployment of military and/or police to enforce COVID-19 related rules and restrictions |
| State of emergency | State of emergency declarations which endow governments with additional powers to enforce policies | |
| Mandated face mask use | Requirements for the general population to wear a facemask in public |
Fig. 1Schematic of data collection for an example administrative unit. Each point represents a date of policy change. Colors represent the degree or intensity of policy implementation. The time arrow goes from left to right. Dashed lines indicate the period over which data were collected.
Fig. 2Spatial resolution of the data reported in each country. This figure shows the percentage of interventions reported at the national level for data reported from January 1, 2020 to July 10, 2020. As of July 10, there have been 10,129 records logged into our database covering 137 countries. A graduated color scale is used to show the percentage of national data available for each country, with the darkest shades representing the highest proportions of such data available. Countries in grey are those where no data have been recorded.
Fig. 3Illustrative example of implemented PHSM for data collected from New Zealand and India at the national and sub-national level to date. Each point represents an intervention. To illustrate interventions of the same type that occurred on the same date, the points are jittered vertically. Dashed line indicates when the first case of COVID-19 was reported in each country (February 28, 2020 and January 30, 2020, respectively).
| Measurement(s) | Public Health • Preventive Intervention |
| Technology Type(s) | digital curation |
| Factor Type(s) | country • date |
| Sample Characteristic - Location | global |