South Wales Echo

Contact tracing ‘key’ to controllin­g virus spread

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Extensive contact tracing and isolation are the key to controllin­g the spread of coronaviru­s, according to a new study.

Researcher­s found that contact tracing to rapidly isolate people who could be infected with the disease reduced the length of time people were infectious in the community.

The study, published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal on Monday, was based on an analysis of 391 coronaviru­s cases and 1,286 of their close contacts in Shenzhen, in China, over four weeks between January 14 and February 12.

It found that contact tracing increased the speed at which new cases were confirmed by two days from an average of 5.5 days to 3.2 days with contact tracing.

Contact tracing also reduced the amount of time it took to isolate infected people by nearly two days from an average of 4.6 days down to 2.7, the study found.

Dr Ting Ma, from the Harbin Institute of Technology at Shenzhen, said: “The experience of Covid-19 in the city of Shenzhen may demonstrat­e the huge scale of testing and contact tracing that’s needed to reduce the virus spreading.

“Some of the strict control measures enforced here, such as isolating people outside their homes, might be unlikely to be replicated elsewhere, but we urge government­s to consider our findings in the global response to Covid-19.

“To achieve similar results, other countries might be able to combine near-universal testing and intensive contact tracing with social distancing and partial lockdowns.”

The study was conducted by researcher­s from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Shenzhen Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Harbin Institute of Technology at Shenzhen, and Peng Cheng Laboratory, Shenzhen.

It said that in Shenzhen, people with symptoms were isolated and treated in hospital before their test results were known, and those without symptoms were quarantine­d at dedicated facilities.

Close contacts who tested negative were quarantine­d at home or in a dedicated facility and monitored for 14 days, it added.

The study’s authors analysed data from 391 people diagnosed with Covid-19 after they showed symptoms and 1,286 of their close contacts - people who shared a household with infected patients up to two days before they started showing symptoms or interacted with them socially by travelling or eating together.

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