Feasibility, Uptake, and Results of COVID-19 Antigen Rapid Diagnostic Tests among Refugees and Migrants in a Pilot Project in North-West Syria
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Published:2023-05-16
Issue:5
Volume:8
Page:281
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ISSN:2414-6366
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Container-title:Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
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language:en
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Short-container-title:TropicalMed
Author:
Ghawji Hassan1ORCID, AlYousfi Mohamad Nihad1ORCID, Satyanarayana Srinath1ORCID, Wilson Nevin1ORCID, Tomeh Laila2, Alkhellov Hussam3, Hasan Sali3, Sarin Sanjay4, Kao Kekeletso4
Affiliation:
1. International Organization of Migration, Suheil Majdoubeh 12, Tila’a Al-Ali, Amman P.O. Box 4880, Jordan 2. International Organization of Migration, Sokak No:15 Tugay Şehitkamil, Güvenevler Mahallesi, Gaziantep 29069, Turkey 3. Hand in Hand for Aid and Development, Sokak No:10 27070 Şahinbey/Gaziantep, Binevler, Gaziantep 81041, Turkey 4. Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics FIND, Av De Budé 16, 1202 Geneva, Switzerland
Abstract
North-west Syria (NWS) is a conflict-affected and unstable area. Due to its limited health infrastructure, accessing advanced COVID-19 testing services is challenging. COVID-19 antigen rapid diagnostic tests (Ag-RDTs) have the potential to overcome this barrier. A pilot project was implemented to introduce Ag-RDTs in NWS, aiming to determine the feasibility, uptake, and results of Ag-RDTs and identify facilitators and barriers to testing with Ag-RDTs. A cross-sectional study design involving secondary analysis of data collected during the project was employed. A local non-governmental organization implemented 25,000 Ag-RDTs that were conducted cross-border by trained community health workers. In total, 27,888 eligible individuals were enrolled, 24,956 (89.5%) consented to test, and 121 (0.5%) were COVID-19-positive. The highest positivity was observed among those with severe COVID-19 symptoms (12.7%), with respiratory illnesses (2.5%), enrolled at hospitals in Afrin (2.5%), and healthcare workers (1.9%). A non-random sample of 236 individuals underwent confirmatory RT-PCR testing. Observed sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values were 80.0%, 96.1%, 91.4%, and 90.3%, respectively. Challenges included obtaining informed consent and conducting confirmatory testing. Ag-RDTs represent a feasible screening/diagnostic tool for COVID-19 infections in NWS, with nearly 90% uptake. Embedding Ag-RDTs into COVID-19 testing and screening strategies would be highly beneficial.
Funder
Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Immunology and Microbiology
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