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Strategies at points of entry to reduce importation risk of COVID-19 cases and reopen travel.

Authors :
Dickens, Borame L
Koo, Joel R
Lim, Jue Tao
Sun, Haoyang
Clapham, Hannah E
Wilder-Smith, Annelies
Cook, Alex R
Source :
Journal of Travel Medicine. Dec2020, Vol. 27 Issue 8, p1-8. 8p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>With more countries exiting lockdown, public health safety requires screening measures at international travel entry points that can prevent the reintroduction or importation of the severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus-2. Here, we estimate the number of cases captured, quarantining days averted and secondary cases expected to occur with screening interventions.<bold>Methods: </bold>To estimate active case exportation risk from 153 countries with recorded coronavirus disease-2019 cases and deaths, we created a simple data-driven framework to calculate the number of infectious and upcoming infectious individuals out of 100 000 000 potential travellers from each country, and assessed six importation risk reduction strategies; Strategy 1 (S1) has no screening on entry, S2 tests all travellers and isolates test-positives where those who test negative at 7 days are permitted entry, S3 the equivalent but for a 14 day period, S4 quarantines all travellers for 7 days where all are subsequently permitted entry, S5 the equivalent for 14 days and S6 the testing of all travellers and prevention of entry for those who test positive.<bold>Results: </bold>The average reduction in case importation across countries relative to S1 is 90.2% for S2, 91.7% for S3, 55.4% for S4, 91.2% for S5 and 77.2% for S6. An average of 79.6% of infected travellers are infectious upon arrival. For the top 100 exporting countries, an 88.2% average reduction in secondary cases is expected through S2 with the 7-day isolation of test-positives, increasing to 92.1% for S3 for 14-day isolation. A substantially smaller reduction of 30.0% is expected for 7-day all traveller quarantining, increasing to 84.3% for 14-day all traveller quarantining.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The testing and isolation of test-positives should be implemented provided good testing practices are in place. If testing is not feasible, quarantining for a minimum of 14 days is recommended with strict adherence measures in place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11951982
Volume :
27
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Travel Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147815006
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jtm/taaa141