Author
Listed:
- Diego R Hijano
- James M Hoffman
- Li Tang
- Stacey L Schultz-Cherry
- Paul G Thomas
- Hana Hakim
- Richard J Webby
- Randall T Hayden
- Aditya H Gaur
- St. Jude COVID-19 Employee Screening Program Team
Abstract
COVID-19 remains a challenge worldwide, and testing of asymptomatic individuals remains critical to pandemic control measures. Starting March 2020, a total of 7497 hospital employees were tested at least weekly for SARS CoV-2; the cumulative incidence of asymptomatic infections was 5.64%. Consistently over a 14-month period half of COVID-19 infections (414 of 820, total) were detected through the asymptomatic screening program, a third of whom never developed any symptoms during follow-up. Prompt detection and isolation of these cases substantially reduced the risk of potential workplace and outside of workplace transmission. COVID-19 vaccinations of the workforce were initiated in December 2020. Twenty-one individuals tested positive after being fully vaccinated (3.9 per 1000 vaccinated). Most (61.9%) remained asymptomatic and in majority (75%) the virus could not be sequenced due to low template RNA levels in swab samples. Further routine testing of vaccinated asymptomatic employees was stopped and will be redeployed if needed; routine testing for those not vaccinated continues. Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 testing, as a part of enhanced screening, monitors local dynamics of the COVID-19 pandemic and can provide valuable data to assess the ongoing impact of COVID-19 vaccination and SARS-CoV-2 variants, inform risk mitigation, and guide adaptive, operational planning including titration of screening strategies over time, based on infection risk modifiers such as vaccination.
Suggested Citation
Diego R Hijano & James M Hoffman & Li Tang & Stacey L Schultz-Cherry & Paul G Thomas & Hana Hakim & Richard J Webby & Randall T Hayden & Aditya H Gaur & St. Jude COVID-19 Employee Screening Program Te, 2022.
"An adaptive, asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 workforce screening program providing real-time, actionable monitoring of the COVID-19 pandemic,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 17(5), pages 1-9, May.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0268237
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0268237
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