Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2021)

Real-Time Genomics for Tracking Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Border Incursions after Virus Elimination, New Zealand

  • Jordan Douglas,
  • Jemma L. Geoghegan,
  • James Hadfield,
  • Remco Bouckaert,
  • Matthew Storey,
  • Xiaoyun Ren,
  • Joep de Ligt,
  • Nigel French,
  • David Welch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2709.211097
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 9
pp. 2361 – 2368

Abstract

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Since severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 was first eliminated in New Zealand in May 2020, a total of 13 known coronavirus disease (COVID-19) community outbreaks have occurred, 2 of which led health officials to issue stay-at-home orders. These outbreaks originated at the border via isolating returnees, airline workers, and cargo vessels. Because a public health system was informed by real-time viral genomic sequencing and complete genomes typically were available within 12 hours of community-based positive COVID-19 test results, every outbreak was well-contained. A total of 225 community cases resulted in 3 deaths. Real-time genomics were essential for establishing links between cases when epidemiologic data could not do so and for identifying when concurrent outbreaks had different origins.

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