Health Research Policy and Systems (Jan 2023)

Limitations of COVID-19 testing and case data for evidence-informed health policy and practice

  • Elizabeth Alvarez,
  • Iwona A. Bielska,
  • Stephanie Hopkins,
  • Ahmed A. Belal,
  • Donna M. Goldstein,
  • Jean Slick,
  • Sureka Pavalagantharajah,
  • Anna Wynfield,
  • Shruthi Dakey,
  • Marie-Carmel Gedeon,
  • Edris Alam,
  • Katrina Bouzanis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-023-00963-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) became a pandemic within a matter of months. Analysing the first year of the pandemic, data and surveillance gaps have subsequently surfaced. Yet, policy decisions and public trust in their country’s strategies in combating COVID-19 rely on case numbers, death numbers and other unfamiliar metrics. There are many limitations on COVID-19 case counts internationally, which make cross-country comparisons of raw data and policy responses difficult. Purpose and conclusions This paper presents and describes steps in the testing and reporting process, with examples from a number of countries of barriers encountered in each step, all of which create an undercount of COVID-19 cases. This work raises factors to consider in COVID-19 data and provides recommendations to inform the current situation with COVID-19 as well as issues to be aware of in future pandemics.

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