游轮旅行和COVID-19的传播——以澳大利亚为例研究

A. Quigley, P. Nguyen, Haley Stone, Samsung Lim, C. Macintyre
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引用次数: 10

摘要

导言:与游轮相关的COVID-19疫情已被确定为澳大利亚和全球COVID-19社区传播的潜在来源。邮轮和社区上COVID-19感染的风险因素和潜在缓解措施是一个研究空白。方法:对2020年1月1日至2020年5月11日全球报告新型冠状病毒感染的游轮上COVID-19发病率的危险因素进行相关和回归分析,并对澳大利亚进行了更详细的分析。采用关键时间段的地理空间新兴热点分析,评估与澳大利亚新南威尔士州两起游轮事件相关的COVID-19病例空间聚类的时间趋势。结果:在全球有COVID-19病例的36艘游轮中,可用客舱与发病率呈中度负相关(-0.4154;95% ci [-0.0002, -0.00003], p < 0.0118)。客舱数、客舱甲板数和客舱空间比与攻击率显著相关,但在海上停留的时间与攻击率无显著相关。截至2020年5月,游轮乘客占澳大利亚COVID-19病例的14.9%,占COVID-19相关死亡人数的27%。悉尼新出现的社区传播热点出现在两次游轮事件的1-2个潜伏期。结论:降低邮轮风险的重点应放在空间设计和减少拥挤上,包括快速监测和船上测试。为了在2019冠状病毒病期间降低这种风险,所有从受感染船舶上岸的乘客,无论出现什么症状,都应被隔离至少14天,并接受COVID-19检测。接种疫苗应是任何旅行的先决条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cruise Ship Travel and the Spread of COVID-19 – Australia as a Case Study
Introduction: Cruise ship linked COVID-19 outbreaks have been identified as a potential source of community transmission of COVID-19 in Australia and worldwide. The risk factors and potential mitigation around COVID-19 infections on cruise ships and communities is a research gap. Methods: A correlation and regression analyses for risk factors for COVID-19 attack rates oncruise ships worldwide with reported COVID-19 from January 1, 2020 to May 11, 2020 were performed, with a more detailed analysis done for Australia. Geospatial emerging hot spot analysis during key time periods was used to assess temporal trends in spatial clustering of COVID-19 cases related to two cruise ship events in NSW, Australia. Results: For 36 cruise ships with global COVID-19 cases, available cabins had a moderate inverse correlation with the attack rate (-0.4154; 95% CI [-0.0002, -0.00003], P < 0.0118). The number of cabins, the number of decks with cabins, and passenger-to-space ratio were significantly associated with attack rate, however, the duration at sea was not. By May 2020, cruise ship passengers made up 14.9% of COVID-19 cases in Australia and 27% of the COVID-19 related deaths. Emerging hot spots of community transmission in Sydney occurred during 1-2 incubation periods of two cruise ship events. Conclusion: Mitigation of risk on cruise ships should focus on spatial design and reducing crowding, including rapid surveillance and on-board testing. To mitigate this risk during the era of COVID-19, all passengers disembarking an infected ship should be quarantined for at least the 14-day window period and tested for COVID-19, regardless of symptoms. Vaccination should be a pre-requisite for travel of any kind once available.
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