Division of Public Health, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
bioMérieux, Inc, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2022 Aug 24;8(8):e34757. doi: 10.2196/34757.
Acute gastrointestinal (GI) illnesses are of the most common problems evaluated by physicians and some of the most preventable. There is evidence of GI pathogen transmission when people are in close contact. The COVID-19 pandemic led to the sudden implementation of widespread social distancing measures in the United States. There is strong evidence that social distancing measures impact the spread of SARS-CoV-2, and a growing body of research indicates that these measures also decrease the transmission of other respiratory pathogens.
This study aims to investigate the impact of COVID-19 social distancing mandates on the GI pathogen positivity rates.
Deidentified GI Panel polymerase chain reaction test results from a routinely collected diagnostic database from January 1, 2019, through August 31, 2020, were analyzed for the GI pathogen positivity percentage. An interrupted time series analysis was performed, using social distancing mandate issue dates as the intervention date. The following 3 target organisms were chosen for the final analysis to represent different primary transmission routes: adenovirus F40 and 41, norovirus GI and GII, and Escherichia coli O157.
In total, 84,223 test results from 9 states were included in the final data set. With the exception of E coli O157 in Kansas, Michigan, and Nebraska, we observed an immediate decrease in positivity percentage during the week of social distancing mandates for all other targets and states. Norovirus GI and GII showed the most notable drop in positivity, whereas E coli O157 appeared to be least impacted by social distancing mandates. Although we acknowledge the analysis has a multiple testing problem, the majority of our significant results showed significance even below the .01 level.
This study aimed to investigate the impact of social distancing mandates for COVID-19 on GI pathogen positivity, and we discovered that social distancing measures in fact decreased GI pathogen positivity initially. The use of similar measures may prove useful in GI pathogen outbreaks. The use of a unique diagnostic database in this study exhibits the potential for its use as a public health surveillance tool.
急性胃肠道(GI)疾病是医生最常评估的最常见问题之一,也是最可预防的问题之一。当人们密切接触时,有证据表明会发生 GI 病原体传播。COVID-19 大流行导致美国突然实施了广泛的社会隔离措施。有强有力的证据表明,社会隔离措施会影响 SARS-CoV-2 的传播,越来越多的研究表明,这些措施还会降低其他呼吸道病原体的传播。
本研究旨在调查 COVID-19 社会隔离命令对 GI 病原体阳性率的影响。
对 2019 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 8 月 31 日期间从常规收集的诊断数据库中获得的匿名 GI 小组聚合酶链反应检测结果进行分析,以确定 GI 病原体阳性百分比。使用社会隔离命令发布日期作为干预日期进行中断时间序列分析。选择以下 3 种目标生物进行最终分析,以代表不同的主要传播途径:腺病毒 F40 和 41、诺如病毒 GI 和 GII 以及大肠杆菌 O157。
总共包括来自 9 个州的 84223 个检测结果。除堪萨斯州、密歇根州和内布拉斯加州的大肠杆菌 O157 外,我们观察到在社会隔离命令实施的一周内,所有其他目标和州的阳性百分比均立即下降。诺如病毒 GI 和 GII 的阳性率下降最为明显,而大肠杆菌 O157 似乎受社会隔离命令的影响最小。尽管我们承认分析存在多次测试问题,但我们的大多数重要结果即使在.01 以下也显示出了显著性。
本研究旨在调查 COVID-19 社会隔离命令对 GI 病原体阳性率的影响,我们发现社会隔离措施实际上最初降低了 GI 病原体的阳性率。在 GI 病原体爆发时,使用类似的措施可能会很有用。本研究中使用独特的诊断数据库表明,其作为公共卫生监测工具具有潜力。