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Policy Decisions and Use of Information Technology to Fight Coronavirus Disease, Taiwan

Cheryl Lin, Wendy E. Braund, John Auerbach, Jih-Haw Chou, Ju-Hsiu Teng, Pikuei Tu, Jewel Mullen

2020Emerging infectious diseases147 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Because of its proximity to and frequent travelers to and from China, Taiwan faces complex challenges in preventing coronavirus disease (COVID-19). As soon as China reported the unidentified outbreak to the World Health Organization on December 31, 2019, Taiwan assembled a taskforce and began health checks onboard flights from Wuhan. Taiwan's rapid implementation of disease prevention measures helped detect and isolate the country's first COVID-19 case on January 20, 2020. Laboratories in Taiwan developed 4-hour test kits and isolated 2 strains of the coronavirus before February. Taiwan effectively delayed and contained community transmission by leveraging experience from the 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak, prevalent public awareness, a robust public health network, support from healthcare industries, cross-departmental collaborations, and advanced information technology capacity. We analyze use of the National Health Insurance database and critical policy decisions made by Taiwan's government during the first 50 days of the COVID-19 outbreak.

Topics & Concepts

OutbreakPublic healthGovernment (linguistics)ChinaDiseaseCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Environmental healthHealth careBusinessDisease surveillanceCoronavirusTransmission (telecommunications)MedicineEconomic growthGeographyInfectious disease (medical specialty)VirologyNursingEngineeringTelecommunicationsLinguisticsEconomicsPhilosophyPathologyArchaeologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesCOVID-19 and Mental Health
Policy Decisions and Use of Information Technology to Fight Coronavirus Disease, Taiwan | Litcius