Author: Terebuh, Pauline D.; Egwiekhor, Amina J.; Gullett, Heidi L.; Fakolade, Adeola O.; Miracle, Jill E.; Ganesh, Prakash T.; Rose, Johnie; Stange, Kurt C.; Szabo, Andrea D.; Grisez, Barry; Brennan, Kevin; Hrusch, Suzanne; Napolitano, Jackie; Brazile, Ramona; Allan, Terrence
Title: Characterization of communityâ€wide transmission of SARSâ€CoVâ€2 in congregate living settings and local public healthâ€coordinated response during the initial phase of the COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: zcdpbdqn Document date: 2020_10_15
ID: zcdpbdqn
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Clusters of COVIDâ€19 cases amplify the pandemic and are critical targets for intervention, but comprehensive clusterâ€level data are not collected systematically by federal or most state public health entities. This analysis characterizes COVIDâ€19 clusters among vulnerable populations housed in congregate living settings across an entire community and describes early mitigation efforts. METHODS: The Cuyahoga County Board of Health identified and interviewed COVIDâ€19 cases and
Document: BACKGROUND: Clusters of COVIDâ€19 cases amplify the pandemic and are critical targets for intervention, but comprehensive clusterâ€level data are not collected systematically by federal or most state public health entities. This analysis characterizes COVIDâ€19 clusters among vulnerable populations housed in congregate living settings across an entire community and describes early mitigation efforts. METHODS: The Cuyahoga County Board of Health identified and interviewed COVIDâ€19 cases and exposed contacts, assessing possible connections to congregate living facilities within its jurisdiction from March 7, 2020, to May 15, 2020, during the first phase of the pandemic, while state of Ohio stayâ€atâ€home orders were in effect. A multiâ€disciplinary teamâ€based response network was mobilized to support active case finding and develop facilityâ€focused containment strategies. RESULTS: We identified a cascade of 45 COVIDâ€19 clusters across community facilities (corrections, nursing, assisted living, intermediate care, extended treatment, shelters, group homes). Attack rates were highest within small facilities (P < .01) and large facilities requiring extensive support to implement effective containment measures. For 25 clusters, we identified an index case who frequently (88%) was a healthcare worker. Engagement of clinical, community, and government partners through public health coordination efforts created opportunities to rapidly develop and coordinate effective response strategies to support the facilities facing the dawning impact of the pandemic. CONCLUSIONS: Active cluster investigations can uncover the dynamics of community transmission affecting both residents of congregate settings and their caregivers and help to target efforts toward populations with ongoing challenges in access to detection and control resources.
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