Viruses (Nov 2021)

Emerging Trends in the Epidemiology of COVID-19: The Croatian ‘One Health’ Perspective

  • Tatjana Vilibic-Cavlek,
  • Vladimir Stevanovic,
  • Diana Brlek-Gorski,
  • Ivana Ferencak,
  • Thomas Ferenc,
  • Magdalena Ujevic-Bosnjak,
  • Irena Tabain,
  • Natasa Janev-Holcer,
  • Ivana Perkovic,
  • Mario Anticevic,
  • Barbara Bekavac,
  • Bernard Kaic,
  • Anna Mrzljak,
  • Marin Ganjto,
  • Ljiljana Zmak,
  • Maja Mauric Maljkovic,
  • Pavle Jelicic,
  • Lovro Bucic,
  • Ljubo Barbic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13122354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. 2354

Abstract

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During the four pandemic waves, a total of 560,504 cases and 10,178 deaths due to COVID-19 were reported in Croatia. The Alpha variant, dominant from March 2021 (>50% of positive samples), was rapidly replaced by Delta variants (>90%) by August 2021. Several seroprevalence studies were conducted in different populations (general population, children/adolescents, professional athletes, healthcare workers, veterinarians) and in immunocompromised patients (hemodialysis patients, liver/kidney transplant recipients). After the first pandemic wave, seroprevalence rates of neutralizing (NT) antibodies were reported to be 0.2–5.5%. Significantly higher seropositivity was detected during/after the second wave, 2.6–18.7%. Two studies conducted in pet animals (February-June 2020/July–December 2020) reported SARS-CoV-2 NT antibodies in 0.76% of cats and 0.31–14.69% of dogs, respectively. SARS-CoV-2 NT antibodies were not detected in wildlife. Environmental samples taken in the households of COVID-19 patients showed high-touch personal objects as most frequently contaminated (17.3%), followed by surfaces in patients’ rooms (14.6%), kitchens (13.3%) and bathrooms (8.3%). SARS-CoV-2 RNA was also detected in 96.8% affluent water samples, while all effluent water samples tested negative. Detection of SARS-CoV-2 in humans, animals and the environment suggests that the ‘One Health’ approach is critical to controlling COVID-19 and future pandemics.

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