Litcius/Paper detail

Effective contact tracing for COVID-19: A systematic review

Carl-Étienne Juneau, Anne-Sara Briand, Pablo Collazzo, Uwe Siebert, Tomas Pueyo

2023Global Epidemiology72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Contact tracing is commonly recommended to control outbreaks of COVID-19, but its effectiveness is unclear. Following PRISMA guidelines, we searched four databases using a range of terms related to contact tracing effectiveness for COVID-19. We found 343 papers; 32 were included. All were observational or modelling studies. Observational studies ( n = 14) provided consistent, very-low certainty evidence that contact tracing (alone or in combination with other interventions) was associated with better control of COVID-19 (e.g. in Hong Kong, only 1084 cases and four deaths were recorded in the first 4.5 months of the pandemic). Modelling studies ( n = 18) provided consistent, high-certainty evidence that under assumptions of prompt and thorough tracing with effective quarantines, contact tracing could stop the spread of COVID-19 (e.g. by reducing the reproduction number from 2.2 to 0.57). A cautious interpretation indicates that to stop the spread of COVID-19, public health practitioners have 2–3 days from the time a new case develops symptoms to isolate the case and quarantine at least 80% of its contacts.

Topics & Concepts

Contact tracingObservational studyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)QuarantineTracingPandemicOutbreakCertaintySevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)MedicineComputer scienceVirologyPathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)MathematicsDiseaseOperating systemGeometryCOVID-19 Digital Contact TracingCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts