Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.

Time analysis of the course of an infectious disease epidemic is a critical way to understand the dynamics of pathogen transmission and the effect of population scale interventions. Computational methods have been applied to the progression of the COVID-19 outbreak in five different countries (Irela...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Wu, Dan, Mac Aonghusa, Pól, O'Shea, Donal F
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10147/631149
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250699
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spelling ftlenus:oai:www.lenus.ie:10147/631149 2024-06-09T07:47:14+00:00 Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs. Wu, Dan Mac Aonghusa, Pól O'Shea, Donal F 2021-04-23 http://hdl.handle.net/10147/631149 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250699 en eng 33891659 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0250699 http://hdl.handle.net/10147/631149 1932-6203 PloS one PloS one 16 4 e0250699 United States HEALTHCARE WORKERS COVID-19 CORONAVIRUS TESTING Article 2021 ftlenus https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250699 2024-05-16T08:13:22Z Time analysis of the course of an infectious disease epidemic is a critical way to understand the dynamics of pathogen transmission and the effect of population scale interventions. Computational methods have been applied to the progression of the COVID-19 outbreak in five different countries (Ireland, Germany, UK, South Korea and Iceland) using their reported daily infection data. A Gaussian convolution smoothing function constructed a continuous epidemic line profile that was segmented into longitudinal time series of mathematically fitted individual logistic curves. The time series of fitted curves allowed comparison of disease progression with differences in decreasing daily infection numbers following the epidemic peak being of specific interest. A positive relationship between the rate of declining infections and countries with comprehensive COVID-19 testing regimes existed. Insight into different rates of decline infection numbers following the wave peak was also possible which could be a useful tool to guide the reopening of societies. In contrast, extended epidemic timeframes were recorded for those least prepared for large-scale testing and contact tracing. As many countries continue to struggle to implement population wide testing it is prudent to explore additional measures that could be employed. Comparative analysis of healthcare worker (HCW) infection data from Ireland shows it closely related to that of the entire population with respect to trends of daily infection numbers and growth rates over a 57-day period. With 31.6% of all test-confirmed infections in healthcare workers (all employees of healthcare facilities), they represent a concentrated 3% subset of the national population which if exhaustively tested (regardless of symptom status) could provide valuable information on disease progression in the entire population (or set). Mathematically, national population and HCWs can be viewed as a set and subset with significant influences on each other, with solidarity between both an essential ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Lenus - Irish Health Publications Archive (HSE - Health Service Executive) Wave Peak ENVELOPE(-45.605,-45.605,-60.610,-60.610) PLOS ONE 16 4 e0250699
institution Open Polar
collection Lenus - Irish Health Publications Archive (HSE - Health Service Executive)
op_collection_id ftlenus
language English
topic HEALTHCARE WORKERS
COVID-19
CORONAVIRUS
TESTING
spellingShingle HEALTHCARE WORKERS
COVID-19
CORONAVIRUS
TESTING
Wu, Dan
Mac Aonghusa, Pól
O'Shea, Donal F
Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
topic_facet HEALTHCARE WORKERS
COVID-19
CORONAVIRUS
TESTING
description Time analysis of the course of an infectious disease epidemic is a critical way to understand the dynamics of pathogen transmission and the effect of population scale interventions. Computational methods have been applied to the progression of the COVID-19 outbreak in five different countries (Ireland, Germany, UK, South Korea and Iceland) using their reported daily infection data. A Gaussian convolution smoothing function constructed a continuous epidemic line profile that was segmented into longitudinal time series of mathematically fitted individual logistic curves. The time series of fitted curves allowed comparison of disease progression with differences in decreasing daily infection numbers following the epidemic peak being of specific interest. A positive relationship between the rate of declining infections and countries with comprehensive COVID-19 testing regimes existed. Insight into different rates of decline infection numbers following the wave peak was also possible which could be a useful tool to guide the reopening of societies. In contrast, extended epidemic timeframes were recorded for those least prepared for large-scale testing and contact tracing. As many countries continue to struggle to implement population wide testing it is prudent to explore additional measures that could be employed. Comparative analysis of healthcare worker (HCW) infection data from Ireland shows it closely related to that of the entire population with respect to trends of daily infection numbers and growth rates over a 57-day period. With 31.6% of all test-confirmed infections in healthcare workers (all employees of healthcare facilities), they represent a concentrated 3% subset of the national population which if exhaustively tested (regardless of symptom status) could provide valuable information on disease progression in the entire population (or set). Mathematically, national population and HCWs can be viewed as a set and subset with significant influences on each other, with solidarity between both an essential ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wu, Dan
Mac Aonghusa, Pól
O'Shea, Donal F
author_facet Wu, Dan
Mac Aonghusa, Pól
O'Shea, Donal F
author_sort Wu, Dan
title Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
title_short Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
title_full Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
title_fullStr Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
title_full_unstemmed Correlation of national and healthcare workers COVID-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
title_sort correlation of national and healthcare workers covid-19 infection data; implications for large-scale viral testing programs.
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10147/631149
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250699
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