大学运动员的症状筛查和 COVID-19 监测检测

Michelle D. Boyd, Joseph D. Visker, Carol Cox
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摘要

冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行给公共和初级医疗保健(包括大学体育)带来了预防、筛查和缓解方面的挑战。在 2020-21 年期间,一所中等规模大学的学生运动员必须接受 COVID-19 筛查计划(症状筛查/监测测试),作为参加体育运动的条件之一。为了确定该筛查计划在识别该人群中患有 COVID-19 诊断的运动员方面的有效性,在每次运动前,所有 334 名学生运动员参与者都要向体育训练人员报告任何 COVID-19 症状,测量体温,并从三支队伍中随机抽取参与者进行额外的嗅觉筛查。所有参与者都接受了 COVID-19 监测测试。每名参与者的电子病历中都记录了筛查和检测过程中每个环节的结果,并与任何阳性 COVID-19 医学诊断进行了交叉比对。在进行的 2025 次监控检测中,只有 32 名参与者的检测结果呈阳性。其中 25 人(78%)在检测前立即向运动教练报告了 COVID-19 症状。只有 7 人(0.035%)在检测前出现阳性症状。然而,110 名出现症状的运动员当天并未参加运动,而是自行前往大学健康中心接受检测。所有 110 人在健康中心的检测结果均呈阳性。在本研究中,作为检测措施,出现并报告 COVID-19 症状似乎有效,而 COVID-19 监测检测似乎无效。由于需要大量昂贵的资源,今后是否继续实施这些程序将很难做出决定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Symptom Screenings and Surveillance Testing for COVID-19 in University Athletes
The Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic presented prevention, screening, and mitigation challenges for public and primary healthcare, including university athletics. During 2020-21, student-athletes at a medium-sized university were required to undergo a COVID-19 screening program [symptom screening/surveillance testing] as a condition of athletic participation.To determine the effectiveness of the screening program in identifying athletes in this population with a COVID-19 diagnosi, prior to every athletic encounter, all 334 student-athlete participants reported any COVID-19 symptoms to the athletic training staff, body temperature was measured, and participants from three teams were randomly selected for an additional anosmia screening. All participants were subject to COVID-19 surveillance testing. For each participant, results of each element of the screening and testing processes were recorded in their electronic medical record and cross-referenced with any positive COVID-19 medical diagnosis. From 2025 surveillance tests conducted, only 32 participants tested positive. Of those, 25 (78%) experienced and reported COVID-19 symptoms to the athletic trainer immediately before testing. Onlyseven (.035%) were captured as pre-symptomatic positive tests. One hundred ten athletes who experienced symptoms, however, did not participate in an athletic encounter that day but instead self-admitted to the university health center for testing. All 110 tested positive at the health center. Experiencing and reporting COVID-19 symptoms appeared effective, and COVID-19 surveillance testing appeared ineffective, as detection measures in this study. Due to the extensive and costly resources needed, the decision to continue to implement these processes in the future will be difficult.
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