Seroprevalence of SARS‐CoV‐2 infection in the general population of Nepal during the first and second generalized waves of the COVID‐19 pandemic—2020–2021
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Published:2023-12
Issue:12
Volume:17
Page:
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ISSN:1750-2640
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Container-title:Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Influenza Resp Viruses
Author:
Paudel Krishna Prasad1, Samuel Reuben2, Jha Runa3, Pandey Basu Dev14ORCID, Edirisuriya Chathura2, Shrestha Nebin Lal5, Gyawali Pradip6, Pokhrel Amrit1, Shrestha Lilee3, Mahato Ram Kumar1, Hossain Shaikh Shah2ORCID, Arunkumar Govindakarnavar2ORCID, Bose Anindya Sekhar2ORCID, Dhimal Meghnath6, Gautam Dipendra2, Neupane Subash2, Thakur Nishant1, Shrestha Saugat2, Bhusal Nirajan2, Jha Priya2, Gupta Binod Prasad2, Rayamajhi Rajan Bikram2, Subedi Koshal Chandra1, Kandel Shashi1ORCID, Poudel Mukesh1, Thapa Lila Bikram1, Sharma Guna Nidhi7, Gocotano Allison Eugenio2, Sunny Avinash K.2, Gautam Rabin2, Bhatta Deepak Raj7, Awale Bal Krishna3, Roka Bhola1, Ojha Hemant Chandra1, Baral Phanindra1, Adhikari Mahendra Dhose1, Lohani Guna Raj7, Shrestha Mahendra7, Singh Dipendra Raman7, Aryal Laxman7, Pandav Rajesh Sambhajirao2, Pokhrel Roshan7
Affiliation:
1. Epidemiology and Disease Control Division, Department of Health Services Ministry of Health and Population Kathmandu Nepal 2. WHO Country Office for Nepal Kathmandu Nepal 3. National Public Health Laboratory Ministry of Health and Population Kathmandu Nepal 4. DEJIMA Infectious Disease Research Alliance (DIDA) Nagasaki University Nagasaki Japan 5. Central Bureau of Statistics National Planning Commission Kathmandu Nepal 6. National Health Research Council Kathmandu Nepal 7. Ministry of Health and Population Kathmandu Nepal
Abstract
AbstractFew seroprevalence studies have been conducted on coronavirus disease (COVID‐19) in Nepal. Here, we aimed to estimate seroprevalence and assess risk factors for infection in the general population of Nepal by conducting two rounds of sampling. The first round was in October 2020, at the peak of the first generalized wave of COVID‐19, and the second round in July–August 2021, following the peak of the wave caused by the delta variant of SARS‐CoV‐2. We used cross‐sectional probability‐to‐size (PPS)‐based multistage cluster sampling to estimate the seroprevalence in the general population of Nepal at the national and provincial levels. We tested for anti‐SARS‐CoV‐2 total antibody using the WANTAI SARS‐CoV‐2 Ab ELISA kit. In Round 1, the overall national seroprevalence was 14.4%, with provincial estimates ranging from 5.3% in Sudurpaschim to 27.3% in Madhesh Province. In Round 2, the estimated national seroprevalence was 70.7%, with the highest in the Madhesh Province (84.8%) and the lowest in the Gandaki Province (62.9%). Seroprevalence was comparable between males and females (Round 1, 15.8% vs. 12.2% and Round 2, 72.3% vs. 68.7%). The seroprevalence in the ecozones—Terai, hills, and mountains—was 76.3%, 65.3%, and 60.5% in Round 2 and 17.7%, 11.7%, and 4.6% in Round 1, respectively. In Nepal, COVID‐19 vaccination was introduced in January 2021. At the peak of the first generalized wave of COVID‐19, most of the population of Nepal remained unexposed to SARS‐CoV‐2. Towards the end of the second generalized wave in April 2021, two thirds of the population was exposed.
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Epidemiology
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