Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.

<h4>Background</h4>Contact tracing is a crucial part of the public health surveillance toolkit. However, it is labor-intensive and costly to carry it out. Some countries have faced challenges implementing contact tracing, and no impact evaluations using empirical data have assessed its i...

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Main Authors: Andres I Vecino-Ortiz, Juliana Villanueva Congote, Silvana Zapata Bedoya, Zulma M Cucunuba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0246987&type=printable
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author Andres I Vecino-Ortiz
Juliana Villanueva Congote
Silvana Zapata Bedoya
Zulma M Cucunuba
author_facet Andres I Vecino-Ortiz
Juliana Villanueva Congote
Silvana Zapata Bedoya
Zulma M Cucunuba
author_sort Andres I Vecino-Ortiz
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>Contact tracing is a crucial part of the public health surveillance toolkit. However, it is labor-intensive and costly to carry it out. Some countries have faced challenges implementing contact tracing, and no impact evaluations using empirical data have assessed its impact on COVID-19 mortality. This study assesses the impact of contact tracing in a middle-income country, providing data to support the expansion and optimization of contact tracing strategies to improve infection control.<h4>Methods</h4>We obtained publicly available data on all confirmed COVID-19 cases in Colombia between March 2 and June 16, 2020. (N = 54,931 cases over 135 days of observation). As suggested by WHO guidelines, we proxied contact tracing performance as the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing out of all cases identified. We calculated the daily proportion of cases identified through contact tracing across 37 geographical units (32 departments and five districts). Further, we used a sequential log-log fixed-effects model to estimate the 21-days, 28-days, 42-days, and 56-days lagged impact of the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing on daily COVID-19 mortality. Both the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing and the daily number of COVID-19 deaths are smoothed using 7-day moving averages. Models control for the prevalence of active cases, second-degree polynomials, and mobility indices. Robustness checks to include supply-side variables were performed.<h4>Results</h4>We found that a 10 percent increase in the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing is related to COVID-19 mortality reductions between 0.8% and 3.4%. Our models explain between 47%-70% of the variance in mortality. Results are robust to changes of specification and inclusion of supply-side variables.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Contact tracing is instrumental in containing infectious diseases. Its prioritization as a surveillance strategy will substantially impact reducing deaths while minimizing the impact on the fragile economic systems of lower and middle-income countries. This study provides lessons for other LMIC.
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spelling doaj-art-0c69cdd8482e472eb68708515d2e66e22025-08-20T02:31:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01163e024698710.1371/journal.pone.0246987Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.Andres I Vecino-OrtizJuliana Villanueva CongoteSilvana Zapata BedoyaZulma M Cucunuba<h4>Background</h4>Contact tracing is a crucial part of the public health surveillance toolkit. However, it is labor-intensive and costly to carry it out. Some countries have faced challenges implementing contact tracing, and no impact evaluations using empirical data have assessed its impact on COVID-19 mortality. This study assesses the impact of contact tracing in a middle-income country, providing data to support the expansion and optimization of contact tracing strategies to improve infection control.<h4>Methods</h4>We obtained publicly available data on all confirmed COVID-19 cases in Colombia between March 2 and June 16, 2020. (N = 54,931 cases over 135 days of observation). As suggested by WHO guidelines, we proxied contact tracing performance as the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing out of all cases identified. We calculated the daily proportion of cases identified through contact tracing across 37 geographical units (32 departments and five districts). Further, we used a sequential log-log fixed-effects model to estimate the 21-days, 28-days, 42-days, and 56-days lagged impact of the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing on daily COVID-19 mortality. Both the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing and the daily number of COVID-19 deaths are smoothed using 7-day moving averages. Models control for the prevalence of active cases, second-degree polynomials, and mobility indices. Robustness checks to include supply-side variables were performed.<h4>Results</h4>We found that a 10 percent increase in the proportion of cases identified through contact tracing is related to COVID-19 mortality reductions between 0.8% and 3.4%. Our models explain between 47%-70% of the variance in mortality. Results are robust to changes of specification and inclusion of supply-side variables.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Contact tracing is instrumental in containing infectious diseases. Its prioritization as a surveillance strategy will substantially impact reducing deaths while minimizing the impact on the fragile economic systems of lower and middle-income countries. This study provides lessons for other LMIC.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0246987&type=printable
spellingShingle Andres I Vecino-Ortiz
Juliana Villanueva Congote
Silvana Zapata Bedoya
Zulma M Cucunuba
Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.
PLoS ONE
title Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.
title_full Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.
title_fullStr Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.
title_short Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia.
title_sort impact of contact tracing on covid 19 mortality an impact evaluation using surveillance data from colombia
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0246987&type=printable
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