Sensitivity of contact-tracing for COVID-19 in Thailand: a capture-recapture application

BMC Infect Dis. 2022 Jan 29;22(1):101. doi: 10.1186/s12879-022-07046-6.

Abstract

Background: We investigate the completeness of contact tracing for COVID-19 during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Thailand, from early January 2020 to 30 June 2020.

Methods: Uni-list capture-recapture models were applied to the frequency distributions of index cases to inform two questions: (1) the unobserved number of index cases with contacts, and (2) the unobserved number of index cases with secondary cases among their contacts.

Results: Generalized linear models (using Poisson and logistic families) did not return any significant predictor (age, sex, nationality, number of contacts per case) on the risk of transmission and hence capture-recapture models did not adjust for observed heterogeneity. Best fitting models, a zero truncated negative binomial for question 1 and zero-truncated Poisson for question 2, returned sensitivity estimates for contact tracing performance of 77.6% (95% CI = 73.75-81.54%) and 67.6% (95% CI = 53.84-81.38%), respectively. A zero-inflated negative binomial model on the distribution of index cases with secondary cases allowed the estimation of the effective reproduction number at 0.14 (95% CI = 0.09-0.22), and the overdispersion parameter at 0.1.

Conclusion: Completeness of COVID-19 contact tracing in Thailand during the first wave appeared moderate, with around 67% of infectious transmission chains detected. Overdispersion was present suggesting that most of the index cases did not result in infectious transmission chains and the majority of transmission events stemmed from a small proportion of index cases.

Keywords: COVID-19; Capture-recapture; Contact tracing; Sensitivity; Thailand.

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19*
  • Contact Tracing*
  • Humans
  • Pandemics
  • SARS-CoV-2
  • Thailand / epidemiology