| Literature DB >> 32970654 |
R Ryan Lash, Catherine V Donovan, Aaron T Fleischauer, Zack S Moore, Gibbie Harris, Susan Hayes, Meg Sullivan, April Wilburn, Jonathan Ong, Dana Wright, Raynard Washington, Amy Pulliam, Brittany Byers, Heather P McLaughlin, Emilio Dirlikov, Dale A Rose, Henry T Walke, Margaret A Honein, Patrick K Moonan, John E Oeltmann.
Abstract
Contact tracing is a strategy implemented to minimize the spread of communicable diseases (1,2). Prompt contact tracing, testing, and self-quarantine can reduce the transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) (3,4). Community engagement is important to encourage participation in and cooperation with SARS-CoV-2 contact tracing (5). Substantial investments have been made to scale up contact tracing for COVID-19 in the United States. During June 1-July 12, 2020, the incidence of COVID-19 cases in North Carolina increased 183%, from seven to 19 per 100,000 persons per day* (6). To assess local COVID-19 contact tracing implementation, data from two counties in North Carolina were analyzed during a period of high incidence. Health department staff members investigated 5,514 (77%) persons with COVID-19 in Mecklenburg County and 584 (99%) in Randolph Counties. No contacts were reported for 48% of cases in Mecklenburg and for 35% in Randolph. Among contacts provided, 25% in Mecklenburg and 48% in Randolph could not be reached by telephone and were classified as nonresponsive after at least one attempt on 3 consecutive days of failed attempts. The median interval from specimen collection from the index patient to notification of identified contacts was 6 days in both counties. Despite aggressive efforts by health department staff members to perform case investigations and contact tracing, many persons with COVID-19 did not report contacts, and many contacts were not reached. These findings indicate that improved timeliness of contact tracing, community engagement, and increased use of community-wide mitigation are needed to interrupt SARS-CoV-2 transmission.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32970654 PMCID: PMC7727500 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6938e3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
COVID-19 contact tracing metrics in two counties — North Carolina, June–July 2020
| Metrics | Mecklenburg County* | Randolph County* |
|---|---|---|
|
| 61,979 | 6,292 |
|
| ||
| Positive laboratory reports received† | 8,097 (13) | 707 (11) |
| Laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases | 7,116 (88)§ | 589 (83)§ |
| Laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases lost to follow-up | 1,602 (23)¶ | 5 (1)** |
| Laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases with initial investigation | 5,514 (77) | 584 (99) |
| Laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases with initial investigation with no contacts named | 2,624 (48) | 202 (35) |
| Laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases with named contacts | 2,890 (52) | 382 (66) |
|
| ||
| No. of Identified contacts | 13,401†† | 1,146 |
| Identified contacts lost to follow-up | 3,331 (25)¶ | 544 (47)¶ |
| Identified contacts opted out of health department daily monitoring | 255 (2) | 50 (4) |
| Identified contacts who agreed to self-quarantine and 14-day monitoring | 9,815 (73)§§ | 552 (48)§§ |
| Identified contacts who agreed to self-quarantine and subsequently had a positive test result | 137¶¶ | 69*** |
|
| ||
| From specimen collection to reported results | 2 (0–29) | 3 (0–15) |
| From specimen collection to case investigation | 4 (0–38) | 3 (0–36) |
| From case investigation to contact notification | 1 (0–25) | 3 (0–26) |
| From specimen collection to contact notification and presumed start of quarantine | 6 (1–38) | 6 (0–58) |
Abbreviation: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019.
* In some cases, column percentages within a category might not sum to 100% because of rounding.
† Difference between positive laboratory reports received and laboratory-confirmed cases (981 in Mecklenburg County and 118 in Randolph County) reflects testing of residents from other jurisdictions or repeat testing.
§ Cases in county residents; the remaining cases were in residents of other jurisdictions or retests.
¶ Could not be reached via phone after 3 consecutive days of failed attempts, or if contact information was missing or invalid.
** Could not be reached via phone after 3 consecutive days of failed attempts and a visit by local law enforcement to the residential address provided, or if contact information was missing or invalid.
†† Does not include contacts identified during investigations of congregate settings or large workplace investigations.
§§ Contacts were monitored by the health department.
¶¶ The total number of contacts who volunteered to be tested is unknown.
*** In total, 293 contacts volunteered to be tested.