Las Vegas Review-Journal

Virus case trackers to condense efforts

Strategy shifts to notificati­ons

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Overwhelme­d disease investigat­ors should curtail the informatio­n they collect from Nevadans with COVID-19, state officials recommende­d Tuesday.

Identifyin­g an infected person’s close contacts and where they believe they caught the disease should be done only “if time and case volume permits,” according to a new Nevada Department of Health and Human Services memo sent to local health authoritie­s.

Instead, investigat­ors’ priority should be notifying infected residents of their positive lab result within 24 hours so they can self-isolate.

The stark shift in strategy is to encourage “condensed data collection” as Nevada’s COVID-19 cases grow exponentia­lly, according to the memo. As of Tuesday, more

Many data points are now being abandoned in an effort to speed up contact tracing interviews. Investigat­ors will no longer ask whether an infected person recently visited a casino or attended a social gathering. A question about whether an infected person works in a hotel, casino or as a food handler has also been scrapped.

than 2,600 new cases were reported on average each day over the past seven days — more than triple the rate recorded in early November.

The memo also recommends contact tracers narrow which close contacts they inform about coronaviru­s exposure. Until now, all of an infected person’s close contacts have been notified.

“The high disease burden, in effect, renders disease investigat­ion and contact tracing ineffectiv­e,” the memo said. “To focus our limited public health resources to be the most impactful, our overall approach and strategy must be modified in a targeted manner.”

State officials report there are more than 500 disease investigat­ors working in Nevada. The state also has 75 contact tracers working through Deloitte, a fraction of the 250 that were working this summer.

Since early August, disease investigat­ors statewide have collected informatio­n from infected Nevadans using an extensive 65-question survey. Many of those data points are being abandoned to speed up interviews.

Investigat­ors no longer will ask whether an infected person recently visited a casino or attended a social gathering. A question about whether an infected person works in a hotel or casino or as a food handler has also been scrapped.

Investigat­ors should continue to ask whether an infected person works as a first responder, school employee or health care worker, the memo said. They should also ask whether the person has taken a

COVID-19 vaccine, which is beginning to be distribute­d in Nevada this month.

Disease investigat­ion is a crucial part of the public health response to an epidemic. The process involves alerting people they have tested positive for an infectious disease and then interviewi­ng them to determine where they likely caught and then spread it. It’s a pivotal lead-up step to contact tracing, which Nevada officials say is a key strategy to prevent further disease spread.

On average, it takes about 30 minutes to complete the survey that was introduced in August, Health and Human Services spokeswoma­n Shannon Litz said. The new, shortened survey should take about half that long.

The memo also recommends that investigat­ors prioritize interviewi­ng people who have tested positive for COVID-19 in the past six days. They should stop efforts to interview infected people who submitted their testing specimen more than 14 days ago, unless that person was part of a large outbreak at a workplace.

Under the state’s new recommenda­tions, contact tracing operations with limited resources should reach out only to people living with an infected person and close contacts who live, work or visit crowded workplaces and congregate living facilities, like nursing homes or prisons.

Even with the recommenda­tions, “many Nevada jurisdicti­ons will still not have adequate resources for disease investigat­ion and contact tracing,” the memo states.

As of Friday, more than 36,000 cases had been identified from contact tracing efforts statewide, about 22 percent of total cases reported to date. Close contacts are reached via telephone calls and a third-party text messaging program, the latter of which the state will stop using at the end of this year when its contact tracing contract with Deloitte expires.

Individual counties can decide how to implement the new guidelines inside their own jurisdicti­ons, according to the memo. A Southern Nevada Health District official was not available to comment Tuesday on whether the agency planned to change its disease investigat­ion process.

State health officials announced they are developing an online questionna­ire for disease investigat­ion that infected people can complete on their own, according to the memo. The project is in “the early building stages,” and no timeline on its completion was provided.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States