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COVID-19 in the Brazilian Oil Capital: the successful experience of public and private engagement

Authors :
Ana Cristina Petry
Alessandra da Silva de Alvarenga
Leandro de Oliveira Drummond
Layza Mendes Brandão
Márcio José de Medeiros
Bruno da Costa Rodrigues
Keity Jaqueline Chagas Vilela Nocchi
José Luciano Nepomuceno-Silva
Rodrigo Brindeiro
Janimayri Forastieri de Almeida
Natália Martins Feitosa
Cintia Monteiro-de-Barros
Raphael de Mello Carpes
Flavia Borges Mury
Diego Henrique Silvestre
Graziele Fonseca de Sousa
Carina Azevedo Oliveira Silva
Jhenifer Nascimento da Silva
Rodrigo Nunes-da-Fonseca
Allan Pierre Bonetti Pozzobon
Jackson de Souza Menezes
Daniele das Graças dos Santos
Lupis Ribeiro Gomes Neto
Taynan Motta Portal
Amilcar Tanuri
Renata Coutinho dos Santos
Raquel de Souza Gestinari
Manuela Leal da Silva
Carla Zilberberg
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Background Brazilian strategy to overcome the spread of COVID-19 has been particularly criticized due to the lack of a national coordinating effort and an appropriate testing program. Here, a successful approach to control the spread of COVID-19 transmission is described by the engagement of public (university and governance) and private sectors (hospitals and oil companies) in Macaé, state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, a city known as the National Oil Capital. Methods Until the 38th epidemiological week, over two percent of the 206,728 citizens were subjected to symptom analysis and massive RT-qPCR testing by the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, with positive individuals being notified up to 48 hours after swab collection. Geocodification and spatial cluster analysis were used to limit COVID-19 spreading in Macaé. Findings: Within the first semester after the outbreak of COVID-19 in Brazil, Macaé recorded 1.8% of fatality associated to COVID-19 up to the 38th epidemiological week, which was at least five times lower than the state capital (10.92%). Overall, considering the successful experience of this joint effort of private and public engagement in Macaé, our data suggest that the development of a similar strategy country wise would have saved over 50,000 lives. Interpretation: Quarantine decree by the local government, molecular massive testing coupled to scientific analysis of COVID-19 spreading prevented the catastrophic consequences of the pandemic as seen in other populous cities within the state of Rio de Janeiro and elsewhere in Brazil.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ec7e5fb574d627476207b0ca512dd390