Nature Communications (Jun 2021)
Citywide serosurveillance of the initial SARS-CoV-2 outbreak in San Francisco using electronic health records
- Isobel Routledge,
- Adrienne Epstein,
- Saki Takahashi,
- Owen Janson,
- Jill Hakim,
- Elias Duarte,
- Keirstinne Turcios,
- Joanna Vinden,
- Kirk Sujishi,
- Jesus Rangel,
- Marcelina Coh,
- Lee Besana,
- Wai-Kit Ho,
- Ching-Ying Oon,
- Chui Mei Ong,
- Cassandra Yun,
- Kara Lynch,
- Alan H. B. Wu,
- Wesley Wu,
- William Karlon,
- Edward Thornborrow,
- Michael J. Peluso,
- Timothy J. Henrich,
- John E. Pak,
- Jessica Briggs,
- Bryan Greenhouse,
- Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer
Affiliations
- Isobel Routledge
- University of California San Francisco
- Adrienne Epstein
- University of California San Francisco
- Saki Takahashi
- University of California San Francisco
- Owen Janson
- University of California San Francisco
- Jill Hakim
- University of California San Francisco
- Elias Duarte
- University of California San Francisco
- Keirstinne Turcios
- University of California San Francisco
- Joanna Vinden
- University of California San Francisco
- Kirk Sujishi
- University of California San Francisco
- Jesus Rangel
- University of California San Francisco
- Marcelina Coh
- University of California San Francisco
- Lee Besana
- University of California San Francisco
- Wai-Kit Ho
- University of California San Francisco
- Ching-Ying Oon
- University of California San Francisco
- Chui Mei Ong
- University of California San Francisco
- Cassandra Yun
- University of California San Francisco
- Kara Lynch
- University of California San Francisco
- Alan H. B. Wu
- University of California San Francisco
- Wesley Wu
- Chan Zuckerberg Biohub
- William Karlon
- University of California San Francisco
- Edward Thornborrow
- University of California San Francisco
- Michael J. Peluso
- University of California San Francisco
- Timothy J. Henrich
- University of California San Francisco
- John E. Pak
- Chan Zuckerberg Biohub
- Jessica Briggs
- University of California San Francisco
- Bryan Greenhouse
- University of California San Francisco
- Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer
- University of California San Francisco
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23651-6
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 12,
no. 1
pp. 1 – 9
Abstract
Population-based surveys are the gold standard for estimating seroprevalence but are expensive and often only capture a small geographic area or window of time. This study describes a new platform, SCALE-IT, for serosurveillance based on algorithmic sampling of electronic health records, and uses it to estimate the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in San Francisco.