A Longitudinal, Clinical, and Spatial Epidemiologic Analysis of a Large COVID-19 Long-Term Care Home Outbreak

Dylan Kain,Nathan Stall,Kevin Brown,Liz McCreight,Elizabeth Rea, Maya Kamal, John Brenner, Melissa Verge, Robert Davies,Jennie Johnstone

Journal of the American Medical Directors Association(2021)

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摘要
Objectives: COVID-19 has had devastating effects on long-term care homes across much of the world, and especially within Canada, with more than 50% of the mortality from COVID-19 in 2020 in these homes. Understanding the way in which the virus spreads within these homes is critical to preventing further outbreaks. Design: Retrospective chart review. Settings and Participants: Long-term care home residents and staff in Ontario, Canada. Methods: We conducted a longitudinal study of a large long-term care home COVID-19 outbreak in Ontario, Canada, using electronic medical records, public health records, staff assignments, and resident room locations to spatially map the outbreak through the facility. Results: By analyzing the outbreak longitudinally, we were able to draw 3 important conclusions: (1) 84.5% had typical COVID-19 symptoms and only 15.5% of residents had asymptomatic infection; (2) there was a high attack rate of 85.8%, which appeared to be explained by a high degree of interconnectedness within the home exacerbated by staffing shortages; and (3) clustering of infections within multibedded rooms was common. Conclusion and Implications: Low rates of asymptomatic infection suggest that symptom-based screening in residents remains very important for detecting outbreaks, a high degree of interconnectedness explains the high attack rate, and there is a need for improved guidance for homes with multibedded rooms on optimizing resident room movement to mitigate spread of COVID-19 in long-term care homes. (c) 2021 AMDA -The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.
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COVID-19,SARS-CoV-2,nursing home,long-term care
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