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Public Health Rep ; 137(2_suppl): 51S-55S, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35189766

ABSTRACT

SARS-CoV-2 has exposed limitations of public health mitigation measures such as traditional case investigations and contact tracing. The Whiteriver Service Unit is a rural, acute care hospital on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona with integrated health care delivery and public health services. During the first wave of COVID-19 cases in May-June 2020, we developed an innovative case investigation contact tracing approach that relied heavily on cross-trained personnel, in-person encounters, and baseline clinical evaluations. A second COVID-19 surge during December 13, 2020-January 31, 2021, caused incidence to peak at 413 cases per 100 000 community members. During that second surge, we investigated all 769 newly identified COVID-19 cases and notified 1911 (99.4%) of 1922 reported contacts. Median time interval from nasopharyngeal specimen collection to both case investigation and contact notification was 0 days (range, 0-5 days and 0-13 days, respectively). Our primary lesson was the importance of cross-trained personnel who integrated tasks along the testing-tracing continuum (eg, in-person interviews, prompt referral for additional testing and evaluation). These successive steps fed forward to identify new cases and their respective contacts. Our innovative community-based approach was both successful and efficient; our experience suggests that when adapted based on local needs, case investigation and contact tracing remain valuable and feasible public health tools, even in rural, resource-limited settings.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Contact Tracing , Humans , United States , COVID-19/epidemiology , SARS-CoV-2 , United States Indian Health Service , Arizona/epidemiology
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