Epidemiology and Health (Sep 2021)

COVID-19 outbreak in a military unit in Korea

  • Chanhee Kim,
  • Young-Man Kim,
  • Namwoo Heo,
  • Eunjung Park,
  • Sojin Choi,
  • Sehyuk Jang,
  • Nayoung Kim,
  • Donghyok Kwon,
  • Young-Joon Park,
  • Byeongseop Choi,
  • Beomman Ha,
  • Kyounghwa Jung,
  • Changbo Park,
  • Sejin Park,
  • Heeyoung Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4178/epih.e2021065
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES This study presents the response of a military unit to an outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Gyeonggi Province. As soon as 2 soldiers were identified as index cases, the infectious disease investigators of the Gyeonggi Provincial Government, Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency, and the Armed Forces Epidemiologic Investigation Center discussed the investigation and response plan for an imminent massive outbreak. METHODS The joint immediate response team (IRT) conducted interviews with confirmed COVID-19 patients, reviewed their medical records, performed contact tracing using global positioning system data, and undertook a field investigation. For risk assessment, the joint IRT visited all 8 sites of the military units and the army chaplain’s church to evaluate the transmission risk at each site. The evaluation items included the size of the site, the use of air conditioning, whether windows were opened, and whether masks were worn. Pooled testing was used for the low-risk population to quickly detect the spread of COVID-19 in the military base. RESULTS One day before the symptom onset of the index case, the lecturer and >50% of the attendees were infected with COVID-19 while attending a lecture that lasted 2 hours and 30 minutes. Attendees were not wearing masks and were in a poorly ventilated room. CONCLUSIONS Since COVID-19 can be spread before symptom onset, contact tracing must be performed to investigate potential exposures prior to symptom onset and to manage any exposed persons.

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