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Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020

BACKGROUND: As the coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic passed initial infection peak in Washington State, phased re-opening lifted stay-at-home orders and restrictions leading to increased non-essential work, social activities and gathering, especially among younger persons. METHODS: A longitudinal coho...

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Autores principales: Malmgren, Judith, Guo, Boya, Kaplan, Henry G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7990283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33760808
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243042
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author Malmgren, Judith
Guo, Boya
Kaplan, Henry G.
author_facet Malmgren, Judith
Guo, Boya
Kaplan, Henry G.
author_sort Malmgren, Judith
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: As the coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic passed initial infection peak in Washington State, phased re-opening lifted stay-at-home orders and restrictions leading to increased non-essential work, social activities and gathering, especially among younger persons. METHODS: A longitudinal cohort analysis of Washington State Department of Health COVID-19 confirmed case age distribution 1) March-April 2020 (N = 13,934) and 2) March-August 2020 (N = 76,032) for proportional change over time using chi square tests for significance. RESULTS: From March 1st to April 19, 2020 COVID-19 age distribution shifted with a 10% decline in cases age 60 years and older and a 20% increase in age 0-19/20-39 years (chi-square = 223.10, p < .001). Number of cases over the initial analysis period were 0–19 years n = 515, 20–39 years n = 4078, 40–59 years n = 4788, 60–79 years n = 3221, 80+ years n = 1332. After the peak (March 22, 2020), incidence declined in older age groups and increased among age 0–19 and 20–39 age groups from 20% to 40% of total cases by April 19 and 50% by May 3. During this time testing expanded with more testing among older age groups and less testing among younger age groups while case positivity shifted young. Percent positive cases age 0-19/20-39 years through August 2020 increased to a consistent average of 60% [age 0–19 increased to 19% (N = 10257), age 20–39 increased to 42% (N = 30215)]. CONCLUSIONS: An increased sustained proportion of COVID-19 incidence is present among children (age 0–19) and young adults (age 20–39) indicating an elevated role in disease spread during the epidemic creating a possible reservoir of disease with spillover risk to more vulnerable older persons and those with comorbid conditions. Media savvy age-appropriate messaging to enhance mitigation compliance among less vulnerable, more mobile and lower priority vaccination age groups will be a continued necessity and priority to reduce overall population incidence.
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spelling pubmed-79902832021-04-05 Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020 Malmgren, Judith Guo, Boya Kaplan, Henry G. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: As the coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic passed initial infection peak in Washington State, phased re-opening lifted stay-at-home orders and restrictions leading to increased non-essential work, social activities and gathering, especially among younger persons. METHODS: A longitudinal cohort analysis of Washington State Department of Health COVID-19 confirmed case age distribution 1) March-April 2020 (N = 13,934) and 2) March-August 2020 (N = 76,032) for proportional change over time using chi square tests for significance. RESULTS: From March 1st to April 19, 2020 COVID-19 age distribution shifted with a 10% decline in cases age 60 years and older and a 20% increase in age 0-19/20-39 years (chi-square = 223.10, p < .001). Number of cases over the initial analysis period were 0–19 years n = 515, 20–39 years n = 4078, 40–59 years n = 4788, 60–79 years n = 3221, 80+ years n = 1332. After the peak (March 22, 2020), incidence declined in older age groups and increased among age 0–19 and 20–39 age groups from 20% to 40% of total cases by April 19 and 50% by May 3. During this time testing expanded with more testing among older age groups and less testing among younger age groups while case positivity shifted young. Percent positive cases age 0-19/20-39 years through August 2020 increased to a consistent average of 60% [age 0–19 increased to 19% (N = 10257), age 20–39 increased to 42% (N = 30215)]. CONCLUSIONS: An increased sustained proportion of COVID-19 incidence is present among children (age 0–19) and young adults (age 20–39) indicating an elevated role in disease spread during the epidemic creating a possible reservoir of disease with spillover risk to more vulnerable older persons and those with comorbid conditions. Media savvy age-appropriate messaging to enhance mitigation compliance among less vulnerable, more mobile and lower priority vaccination age groups will be a continued necessity and priority to reduce overall population incidence. Public Library of Science 2021-03-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7990283/ /pubmed/33760808 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243042 Text en © 2021 Malmgren et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Malmgren, Judith
Guo, Boya
Kaplan, Henry G.
Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020
title Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020
title_full Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020
title_fullStr Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020
title_full_unstemmed Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020
title_short Continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive COVID-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: Washington State March—August 2020
title_sort continued proportional age shift of confirmed positive covid-19 incidence over time to children and young adults: washington state march—august 2020
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7990283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33760808
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243042
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