Characterising within-hospital SARS-CoV-2 transmission events using epidemiological and viral genomic data across two pandemic waves
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Published:2022-02-03
Issue:1
Volume:13
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Lindsey Benjamin B.ORCID, Villabona-Arenas Ch. JuliánORCID, Campbell Finlay, Keeley Alexander J.ORCID, Parker Matthew D.ORCID, Shah Dhruv R.ORCID, Parsons Helena, Zhang Peijun, Kakkar Nishchay, Gallis Marta, Foulkes Benjamin H.ORCID, Wolverson PaigeORCID, Louka Stavroula F., Christou Stella, State Amy, Johnson Katie, Raza Mohammad, Hsu SharonORCID, Jombart Thibaut, Cori Anne, Shah Dhruv R., Johnson Katie, Hsu Sharon, de Silva Thushan I., Cope Alison, Ali Nasar, Raghei Rasha, Heffer Joe, Smith Nikki, Whiteley Max, Pohare Manoj, Hansford Samantha E., Green Luke R., Wang Dennis, Anckorn Michael, Angyal Adrienn, Brown Rebecca, Hornsby Hailey, Yavuz Mehmet, Groves Danielle C., Parsons Paul J., Tucker Rachel M., Dabrowska Magdalena B., Saville Thomas, Schutter Jose, Wyles Matthew D., Evans Cariad, Davies Nicholas G., Pearson Carl A. B., Quaife Matthew, Tully Damien C., Abbott Sam, Evans Cariad M., Partridge David G.ORCID, Atkins Katherine E.ORCID, Hué StéphaneORCID, de Silva Thushan I.ORCID, , ,
Abstract
AbstractHospital outbreaks of COVID19 result in considerable mortality and disruption to healthcare services and yet little is known about transmission within this setting. We characterise within hospital transmission by combining viral genomic and epidemiological data using Bayesian modelling amongst 2181 patients and healthcare workers from a large UK NHS Trust. Transmission events were compared between Wave 1 (1st March to 25th July 2020) and Wave 2 (30th November 2020 to 24th January 2021). We show that staff-to-staff transmissions reduced from 31.6% to 12.9% of all infections. Patient-to-patient transmissions increased from 27.1% to 52.1%. 40%-50% of hospital-onset patient cases resulted in onward transmission compared to 4% of community-acquired cases. Control measures introduced during the pandemic likely reduced transmissions between healthcare workers but were insufficient to prevent increasing numbers of patient-to-patient transmissions. As hospital-acquired cases drive most onward transmission, earlier identification of nosocomial cases will be required to break hospital transmission chains.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary
Reference41 articles.
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