Flattening the curve in 52 days: characterisation of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Principality of Liechtenstein - an observational study
Autor: | Pietro Vernazza, Sarah Thiel, Philipp Kohler, Michael Ritzler, Tomas V Karajan, Nadia Wohlwend, Matthias Paprotny, Felix Fleisch, Martin Risch, Dorothea Hillmann, Alexia Cusini, Lorenz Risch, Myriam Weber, Thomas Lung, Sandra Copeland, Christian R Kahlert |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Isolation (health care) Population Pneumonia Viral 610 Medicine & health 03 medical and health sciences Betacoronavirus 0302 clinical medicine COVID-19 Testing 0502 economics and business Pandemic Medicine Humans education Pandemics Monitoring Physiologic education.field_of_study business.industry Clinical Laboratory Techniques SARS-CoV-2 Mortality rate Incidence (epidemiology) Public health Incidence 05 social sciences COVID-19 General Medicine 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Family medicine Workforce Asymptomatic Diseases Communicable Disease Control 050211 marketing Female Contact Tracing business Coronavirus Infections Liechtenstein Contact tracing |
Zdroj: | Thiel, Sarah Lucia; Weber, Myriam Carol; Risch, Lorenz; Wohlwend, Nadia; Lung, Thomas; Hillmann, Dorothea; Ritzler, Michael; Risch, Martin; Kohler, Philipp; Vernazza, Pietro; Kahlert, Christian R; Fleisch, Felix; Cusini, Alexia; Karajan, Tomas V; Copeland, Sandra; Paprotny, Matthias (2020). Flattening the curve in 52 days: characterisation of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Principality of Liechtenstein-an observational study. Swiss medical weekly, 150(w20361), w20361. EMH Media 10.4414/smw.2020.20361 |
ISSN: | 1424-3997 |
DOI: | 10.4414/smw.2020.20361 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND The principality of Liechtenstein had its first COVID-19 case at the beginning of March 2020. After exponential growth, the pandemic’s first wave was contained, with the last case being diagnosed 52 days after the initial occurrence. AIM To characterise the COVID-19 pandemic in Liechtenstein. METHODS All patients diagnosed in Liechtenstein were followed up until recovery and again 6–8 weeks after symptom onset. They were contacted every 2 days to record their clinical status until the resolution of their symptoms. The diagnosis of COVID-19 was based on clinical symptoms and molecular testing. Household and close workplace contacts were included in the follow-up, which also comprised antibody testing. In addition, public health measures installed during the pandemic in Liechtenstein are summarised. RESULTS During the first wave, 5% of the population obtained a reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction test. A total of 95 patients (median age 39 years) were diagnosed with COVID-19 (82 who resided in Liechtenstein), resulting in an incidence in Liechtenstein of 0.211%. One patient, aged 94, died (mortality rate 1%). Only 62% of patients could retrospectively identify a potential source of infection. Testing the patients’ household and close workplace contacts (n = 170) with antibody tests revealed that 25% of those tested were additional COVID-19 cases, a quarter of whom were asymptomatic. Those households which adhered to strict isolation measures had a significantly lower rate of affected household members than those who didn’t follow such measures. The national public health measures never restricted free movement of residents. Masks were only mandatory in healthcare settings. The use of home working for the general workforce was promoted. Gatherings were prohibited. Schools, universities, certain public spaces (like sports facilities and playgrounds), childcare facilities, nonessential shops, restaurants and bars were closed. Social distancing, hygienic measures, solidarity and supporting individuals who were at risk were the main pillars of the public health campaigns. CONCLUSION The close collaboration of all relevant stakeholders allowed for the complete workup of all COVID-19 patients nationwide. A multitude of factors (e.g., young age of the patients, low-threshold access to testing, close monitoring of cases, high alertness and adherence to public health measures by the population) led to the early containment of the first wave of the pandemic, with a very low rate of serious outcomes. Antibody testing for SARS-CoV-2 revealed a substantial proportion of undiagnosed COVID-19 cases among close contacts of the patients. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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