Author: Franceschi, VinÃcius Bonetti; Santos, Andressa Schneiders; Glaeser, Andressa Barreto; Paiz, Janini Cristina; Caldana, Gabriel Dickin; Machado Lessa, Carem Luana; de Menezes Mayer, Amanda; Küchle, Julia Gonçalves; Gazzola Zen, Paulo Ricardo; Vigo, Alvaro; Winck, Ana Trindade; Rotta, Liane Nanci; Thompson, Claudia Elizabeth
Title: Populationâ€based prevalence surveys during the Covidâ€19 pandemic: A systematic review Cord-id: ol6kmvlf Document date: 2020_12_4
ID: ol6kmvlf
Snippet: Populationâ€based prevalence surveys of Covidâ€19 contribute to establish the burden of infection, the role of asymptomatic and mild infections in transmission, and allow more precise decisions about reopen policies. We performed a systematic review to evaluate qualitative aspects of these studies, assessing their reliability and compiling practices that can influence the methodological quality. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, bioRxiv and medRxiv, and included crossâ€sectional studies using mole
Document: Populationâ€based prevalence surveys of Covidâ€19 contribute to establish the burden of infection, the role of asymptomatic and mild infections in transmission, and allow more precise decisions about reopen policies. We performed a systematic review to evaluate qualitative aspects of these studies, assessing their reliability and compiling practices that can influence the methodological quality. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, bioRxiv and medRxiv, and included crossâ€sectional studies using molecular and/or serological tests to estimate the prevalence of Covidâ€19 in the general population. Survey quality was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Prevalence Studies. A correspondence analysis correlated methodological parameters of each study to identify patterns related to higher, intermediate and lower risks of bias. The available data described 37 surveys from 19 countries. The majority were from Europe and America, used antibody testing, and reached highly heterogeneous sample sizes and prevalence estimates. Minority communities were disproportionately affected by Covidâ€19. Important risk of bias was detected in four domains: sample size, data analysis with sufficient coverage, measurements in standard way and response rate. The correspondence analysis showed few consistent patterns for high risk of bias. Intermediate risk of bias was related to American and European studies, municipal and regional initiatives, blood samples and prevalence >1%. Low risk of bias was related to Asian studies, nationwide initiatives, reverseâ€transcriptase polymerase chain reaction tests and prevalence <1%. We identified methodological standards applied worldwide in Covidâ€19 prevalence surveys, which may assist researchers with the planning, execution and reporting of future populationâ€based surveys.
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