Frontiers in Public Health (Feb 2022)

Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions Implemented to Control the COVID-19 Were Associated With Reduction of Influenza Incidence

  • Qing-Mei Huang,
  • Qing-Mei Huang,
  • Wei-Qi Song,
  • Fen Liang,
  • Bi-Li Ye,
  • Zhi-Hao Li,
  • Xi-Ru Zhang,
  • Wen-Fang Zhong,
  • Pei-Dong Zhang,
  • Dan Liu,
  • Dong Shen,
  • Pei-Liang Chen,
  • Qu Liu,
  • Xingfen Yang,
  • Chen Mao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.773271
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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BackgroundNon-pharmaceutical interventions were implemented in most countries to reduce the transmission of COVID-19. We aimed to describe the incidence of influenza in four countries in the 2019–2020 season and examined the effect of these non-pharmaceutical interventions on the incidence of influenza.MethodsWe used the network surveillance data from 2015 to 2020 to estimate the percentage increase in influenza cases to explore the effect of non-pharmaceutical interventions implemented to control the COVID-19 on the incidence of influenza in China, the United States, Japan, and Singapore.ResultsWe found that the incidence of influenza has been almost zero and reached a persistent near-zero level for a continuous period of six months since epidemiologic week 14 of 2020 in the four countries. Influenza incidence decreased by 77.71% and 60.50% in the early days of COVID-19 in the 2019–2020 season compared to the same period in preceding years in Japan and Singapore, respectively. Furthermore, influenza incidence decreased by 60.50–99.48% during the period of compulsory interventions in the 2019–2020 season compared to the same period in preceding years in the four countries.ConclusionThese findings suggest that the application of non-pharmaceutical interventions, even everyday preventive action, was associated with a reduction of influenza incidence, which highlights that more traditional public health interventions need to be reasserted and universalized to reduce influenza incidence.

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