| Literature DB >> 32945254 |
Anneke Steens1, Birgitte Freiesleben de Blasio1,2, Lamprini Veneti1, Amy Gimma3, W John Edmunds3, Kevin Van Zandvoort3, Christopher I Jarvis3, Frode Forland1, Bjarne Robberstad4,5.
Abstract
To limit SARS-CoV-2 spread, quarantine and isolation are obligatory in several situations in Norway. We found low self-reported adherence to requested measures among 1,704 individuals (42%; 95% confidence interval: 37-48). Adherence was lower in May-June-July (33-38%) compared with April (66%), and higher among those experiencing COVID-19-compatible symptoms (71%) compared with those without (28%). These findings suggest that consideration is required of strategies to improve people's adherence to quarantine and isolation.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; adherence; control measures; isolation; quarantine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32945254 PMCID: PMC7502884 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2020.25.37.2001607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
Figure 1Flowchart of recruitment and dropout of COVID-19 quarantine/isolation study, Norway, April–July, 2020
Description of the participants in COVID-19 quarantine/isolation study, at time of inclusion, Norway, 2020 (n=1,704)
| Variable | Number | Percentage in this panel (unweighted) | Percentage in the Norwegian population [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 wave | 453 | 27 | NA |
| 2 waves | 296 | 17 | NA |
| 3 waves | 340 | 20 | NA |
| 4 waves | 615 | 36 | NA |
| 18–29 | 243 | 14 | 20 |
| 30–49 | 577 | 34 | 34 |
| 50–69 | 650 | 38 | 30 |
| 70–89 | 234 | 14 | 16 |
| Male | 876 | 51 | 50 |
| Female | 827 | 49 | 50 |
| Living in Oslo (where the epidemic hit hardest) | 312 | 18 | 13 |
| Living outside Oslo | 1,392 | 82 | 87 |
| Self-reported medical risk group or pregnant | 714 | 45 | 29 [ |
| No medical risk group | 876 | 55 | 71 |
NA: not applicable.
a Total n=1,703; one answer in category ‘not applicable/other’ excluded from denominator.
b Defined by the question ‘Are you in a high-risk group under which the annual influenza vaccine would usually be offered?’ This includes age ≥ 65 years [11,12]. Total n=1,590; 114 participants answered ‘unknown’.
Quarantine/isolation request and adherence, overall and for those who reported to have had COVID-19 compatible symptoms, COVID-19 quarantine/isolation study, Norway, April–July, 2020
| Variable | Reported symptomsa | Number ‘Yes’ / number with useful informationb | Percentage ‘Yes’ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Received a quarantine/isolation request | Overall | 574 / 4,407 | 13 |
| Symptoms | 174 / 1,092 | 16 | |
| No symptoms | 393 / 3,286 | 12 | |
| Quarantine/isolation events | Overall | 417 / 4,467 | 9 |
| While reporting a request | 204 / 561 | 36 | |
| Symptoms | 198 / 1,102 | 18 | |
| No symptoms | 217 / 3,333 | 7 | |
| Adherence eventse | Overall | 204 / 561 | 36 |
| Symptoms | 116 / 170 | 68 | |
| No symptoms | 87 / 385 | 23 | |
| Non-adherence events | Overall | 357 / 561 | 64 |
| Symptoms | 54 / 170 | 32 | |
| No symptoms | 298 / 385 | 77 | |
| Received a quarantine/isolation request | Overall | 402 / 1,642 | 25 (23–27) |
| Symptoms f | 125 / 648 | 21 (17–24) | |
| No symptoms f | 297 / 1,390 | 22 (19–24) | |
| In quarantine/isolation at least 1 day in at least 1 wave | Overall | 298 / 1,673 | 19 (17–21) |
| Symptoms f | 148 / 657 | 25 (21–28) | |
| No symptoms f | 170 / 1,417 | 13 (11-15) | |
| Adherencee to quarantine/isolation in at least 1 wave | Overall | 154 / 393 | 42 (37–48) |
| Symptoms f | 85 / 124 | 71 (63–79) | |
| No symptoms f | 75 / 290 | 28 (23–34) | |
| No-adherence to quarantine/isolation in at least 1 wave | Overall | 270 / 399 | 65 (60–70) |
CI: confidence interval.
a Symptoms compatible with COVID-19 were: fever or high temperature, a cough that has lasted for at least several hours, shortness of breath, aches and pains (e.g. in back, neck, shoulders or joints), blocked nose, sore throat and feeling unusually tired.
b Useful information means here answering yes or no. Those with missing information, those reporting ‘I prefer not to answer’ and those reporting ‘I do not know’ are excluded. See Supplementary table for all numbers.
c Dependency of the data ignored in analysis.
d Those who answered ‘Do not know/prefer not to answer’ were excluded from the analysis. Additionally, those reporting ‘No quarantine/isolation requests’ were also excluded from the adherence analysis.
e Adherence was defined as ‘Received a quarantine/isolation request’ and reported as the percentage of ‘Was in quarantine at least 1 day’ during the last 7 days at the time of answering the questions.
f The sum of those with symptoms and those without symptoms is more than the overall numbers. This is because a person can have different statuses in different waves.
Figure 2Self-reported adherence to quarantine/isolation over time, (A) overall and by reporting COVID-19-compatible symptoms and (B) by age group, COVID-19 quarantine/isolation study, Norway, 2020