1.Lessons learnt from the first large outbreak of COVID-19 in health-care settings in Tasmania, Australia
Fay H Johnston ; Tara Anderson ; Michelle Harlock ; Natasha Castree ; Louise Parry ; Therese Marfori ; Michelle McPherson ; Mark Veitch ; Kylie J Smith ; Nicola Stephens
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2021;12(4):102-108
Problem:
One month after the initial case of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Tasmania, an island state of Australia, two health-care workers (HCWs) from a single regional hospital were notified to public health authorities following positive tests for SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid. These were the first recognized cases in an outbreak that overwhelmed the hospital’s ability to function.
Context:
The outbreak originated from two index cases. Both had returned to Tasmania following travel on a cruise ship and required hospital admission for management of COVID-19. A total of 138 cases were subsequently linked to this outbreak: 81 HCWs (most being nurses) and 23 patients across three hospitals, one resident of an aged-care facility and 33 close contacts.
Action:
The outbreak was controlled through the identification and isolation of cases, identification and quarantining of close contacts and their household members, closure of the affected facilities and community-level restrictions to reduce social mixing in the affected region.
Lessons learnt:
Factors that were likely to have contributed to ongoing transmission in this setting included workplace practices that prevented adequate physical distancing, attending work while symptomatic, challenges in rapidly identifying contacts, mobility of staff and patients between facilities, and challenges in the implementation of infection control practices.
Discussion
Many commonly accepted hospital practices before the COVID-19 pandemic amplified the outbreak. The lessons learnt from this investigation changed work practices for HCWs and led to wider public health interventions in the management of potential primary and secondary contacts.
2.COVID-19: Integrating genomic and epidemiological data to inform public health interventions and policy in Tasmania, Australia
Nicola Stephens ; Michelle McPherson ; Louise Cooley ; Rob Vanhaeften ; Mathilda Wilmot ; Courtney Lane ; Michelle Harlock ; Kerryn Lodo ; Natasha Castree ; Torsten Seemann ; Michelle Sait ; Susan Ballard ; Kristy Horan ; Mark Veitch ; Fay Johnston ; Norelle Sherry ; Ben Howden
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2021;12(4):93-101
Objective:
We undertook an integrated analysis of genomic and epidemiological data to investigate a large healthcare-associated COVID-19 outbreak and to better understand the epidemiology of all COVID-19 cases in Tasmania, Australia.
Methods:
Epidemiological data collected on COVID-19 cases notified in Tasmania between 2 March and 15 May 2020, and positive SARS-CoV-2 samples or extracted RNA from those cases, were included. Sequencing was conducted by tiled amplicon PCR using ARTIC v1 or v3 primers and Illumina sequencing. Consensus sequences were generated, sequences were aligned to a reference sequence, and phylogenetic analysis performed. Genomic clusters were determined and integrated with epidemiologic data to assess any additional insights.
Results:
All COVID-19 cases notified in Tasmania during the study period (n=231) and 266 SARS-CoV-2 positive samples, representing 217/231 (94%) of notified cases, were included in the study; 182/217 (84%) were clustered, 21/217 (10%) were unique, 12/217 (6%) could not be sequenced. Genomics confirmed the presence of seven epidemiological clusters, clarified transmission networks where epidemiology was unclear and additionally identified another genomic cluster which had not been identified by epidemiology alone.
Discussion