Chattanooga Times Free Press

Virus may spread too fast for Georgia tracers to catch up

- BY TAMAR HALLERMAN, JOHNNY EDWARDS AND J. SCOTT TRUBEY

ATLANTA — After an 82-yearold woman died of COVID-19 in South Georgia, the state’s epidemiolo­gist wanted to warn anyone she might have infected. He tracked her trail to a Sunday worship service attended in March by some 60 people in Waycross.

Ordinarily, under the method of epidemiolo­gical detective work known as contact tracing, every person in the woman’s close orbit while she was contagious would be identified and told to take steps to avoid infecting others.

But ordinary methods wouldn’t do, given the possibilit­y the highly contagious coronaviru­s was spread by people without symptoms and the risk of quickly overrunnin­g local hospitals. So the Department of Public Health took the extreme step of posting a public announceme­nt in early April: “If you or someone you know have recently attended New Mount Pleasant Baptist Church in Waycross, Georgia, you may have been exposed to COVID-19.”

Over the past two months the coronaviru­s has reached so far into the state, health experts question whether Georgia can make a sizable enough investment to track it patient to patient. The state is expanding its contact tracing program as part of Gov. Brian Kemp’s plan to restart public life. Health officials hope the investment, paired with the increased availabili­ty of test kits, can tamp down on community spread as more people venture outside their homes.

But the challenges associated with the coronaviru­s are immense, and many longstandi­ng tracing protocols must be altered or abandoned, experts warn. The Waycross church case revealed limitation­s in the ability of contact tracing to keep pace with the disease.

“In typical contact tracing, you could be on the street, going to someone’s house, knocking on the door, leaving a note and finding them at a basketball court or a hair salon,” said Brian Castrucci, CEO of the Maryland-based de Beaumont Foundation, which assists local and state public health agencies. “This is going to be different.”

Public Health Commission­er Kathleen Toomey said the department plans to engage as many as 1,000 people for the task, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says should be ramped up immediatel­y. But some experts say the state will need to train thousands, not hundreds, of tracers quickly to catch up with a virus that continues to sicken upwards of 700 people a day.

Georgia recently signed a five-year contract with the technology services company MTX Group for a new online platform to aid its efforts.

“This is more than an epidemiolo­gic activity; this is a logistical deployment,” Toomey said Thursday.

Officials will also need to build the support of a public that’s unlikely to accept more invasive forms of surveillan­ce that have been deployed with some success in Southeast Asia.

The large-scale effort won’t be successful without a robust diagnostic testing system alongside it, experts say. Georgia ranked 30th nationally in testing per capita as of Tuesday, according to an Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on analysis of national testing figures, an improvemen­t from 33rd last week and rankings as low as 45th a few weeks ago.

“While contact tracing may be the tentpole of public health and infectious disease response, testing is the cornerston­e,” said Castrucci, a former public health official.

THE LIMITS OF TRACING

In the Waycross case, the church’s pastor, Jackie L. Hooper Sr., said the woman who died had been a visitor at two services. More than a half dozen people from his congregati­on later fell sick with coronaviru­s, he said. Some were hospitaliz­ed, and a 62-year-old church member died April 8.

“It was very, very devastatin­g for us,” Hooper said, “because she was a dedicated usher, and we couldn’t have a service for her like we wanted. We had to have a graveside.”

The state’s Waycross-based epidemiolo­gist wouldn’t talk about the case in detail in an interview with the AJC last month. The public service announceme­nt was one of four that the Southeast Health District put out about Baptist churches in Ware, Pierce and Coffee counties that held services in late March.

“Contact tracing was difficult to impossible,” Trevor Thomas, the health district’s infectious disease coordinato­r, said, “and so prudent steps, historical­ly in these cases, is to do larger notificati­ons to a larger group that attended that event.”

Two months ago, a worstcase scenario unfolded in Albany, where a sick guest turned a funeral into a super-spreader event, the catalyst for an outbreak that’s killed hundreds of people in southwest Georgia. In a March 26 interview, the district health director said the virus had spread so far, his office was no longer trying to trace its origins, but rather stop it from tearing through hospitals and nursing homes.

“At this point, it’s not a wise way to spend our resources, looking back about what happened,” Southwest Health District Director Charles Ruis said.

For decades, Georgia has used contact tracing to limit transmissi­on of infectious diseases such as tuberculos­is, measles and HIV. It had about 250 tracers on staff before the pandemic arrived.

For the coronaviru­s, the CDC currently recommends that tracers contact anyone who was within 6 feet of an infected person for at least 15 minutes starting from 48 hours before illness onset. Those people are isolated, and if they test positive the process repeats for their contacts.

Not only can the work be tedious, but it requires personal sensitivit­y on an extremely tight timeline. Tracers need to quickly build trust with contacts so they’re willing to share personal health informatio­n and isolate for two weeks to halt the virus’ spread.

“They may not have access to health care … or they may not have basic things like transporta­tion to get to a testing site,” said Grace Bagwell Adams, an associate professor of health policy at the University of Georgia.

Traditiona­lly, contact tracers would have time to track down people and offer resources to help them get tested and isolate, including food, transporta­tion, shelter and even money to compensate for lost wages. Most work for the coronaviru­s will be completed over the phone or via the new online platform given social distancing guidelines and the need for speed.

In some respects, contact tracing veterans say outreach for the coronaviru­s could be easier than for HIV or AIDS, since tracers don’t need to pry into a person’s sexual history or drug use. On the other hand, the coronaviru­s spreads more easily, and people who are contagious may show no symptoms.

GEORGIA’S WORK

DPH has kept the details of its expanded contact tracing program tightly held, but Toomey said the department plans to hire at least 600 additional staff in the weeks ahead and engage upwards of 200 students. DPH recently posted job listings for $15-an-hour full- and part-time positions — Toomey said 1,000 people have applied — and has reached out to the state’s medical and public health schools to recruit student interns.

A surge of interest at the University of Georgia’s College of Public Health helped inspire an upcoming summer course about contact tracing for the coronaviru­s, according to Adams, the associate professor. A studentled contact tracing webinar at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University drew about 180 participan­ts last week.

“This is kind of our way of helping the medical community, our mentors, our fellow physicians in the way that we can,” said Catherine Waldron, a graduating Mercer University medical student who helped lead the webinar. Waldron signed on as a volunteer contact tracer at the state’s Coastal Health District in Savannah in March after her hospital rotations were canceled.

The district has two teams of tracers. The first, made up of epidemiolo­gists, is responsibl­e for contacting and interviewi­ng every person who tests positive for COVID-19. Students like Waldron and Rebecca DeCarlo, a fourth-year medical student at the Medical College of Georgia, are part of the second, which calls the close contacts.

That team puts informatio­n about a person’s symptoms into a database known as SendSS, or the State Electronic Notifiable Disease Surveillan­ce System. If symptoms develop, DeCarlo and her team can update the portal, alert a person’s doctor, have people seek a test and isolate themselves and other members of their household.

TESTING SOLUTIONS

The state public health districts, including in Savannah and metro Atlanta, began testing MTX’s new monitoring applicatio­n last week. It interfaces with SendSS and Google Cloud and allows people to log their daily symptoms on their smartphone.

The state signed the contract with MTX in early April. The company, headquarte­red in Texas and New York, has made similar monitoring and tracing platforms for more than a dozen other states over the last two months.

“Everybody wants to know how fast a solution can move so they have a reopening plan in place,” said CEO Das Nobel.

Some privacy advocates have raised concerns about the rules governing the health data being collected by contact tracing software, particular­ly a separate app being developed by Apple and Google that will use Bluetooth to alert people whose cellphones come into close contact with those of infected people.

MTX’s platform does not use Bluetooth. Nor does the company have access to Georgians’ personal health data, said Nobel.

DPH declined to discuss details of the pilot program or whether tracers have enough bandwidth to focus on all cases.

Some experts say contact tracing will not be a panacea and the state should have started such efforts earlier.

“It’s stunning to me this is just in the early stages of rolling out when we started opening businesses a week and a half ago,” said Dr. Harry J. Heiman, a professor at GSU’s School of Public Health.

Others say any effort will be helpful.

“You have to start somewhere,” said Nannette C. Turner, professor and chair of the Department of Public Health in Mercer’s College of Health Profession­s.

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