Alliance for Pandemic Preparedness

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Topic: Public Health Policy and Practice


May 14, 2021

Trends in Pediatric Primary Care Visits during the COVID-19 Pandemic

A retrospective review of a large US commercial medical claims database found that pediatric primary care visits were 60% lower between March 25 and April 21, 2020 compared to the same period in 2019, and problem-focused visits were 63% lower. Primary care visits and problem-focused visits remained 17% and 31% lower in October 2020 compared…


May 13, 2021

Perinatal Outcomes During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ontario, Canada

There were no differences observed in the frequency of preterm birth (7.5%) and stillbirth (0.5%) between a cohort of births during the COVID-19 pandemic (n=67,747) occurring between March and September 2020 and a cohort of pre-pandemic births (n=348,633) occurring within the same calendar period between 2015 and 2019 according to administrative data in Ontario, Canada. …


Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes, Maternal Complications, and Severe Illness among U.S. Delivery Hospitalizations with and without a COVID-19 Diagnosis

Adverse pregnancy outcomes occurred more frequently among US women with documented COVID-19 diagnosis at delivery hospitalization compared to those without diagnosis (4.4% vs 0.8%) in a large study including 703 hospitals (n=489,471 delivery hospitalizations; 1.3% of patients with COVID-19) between March and September 2020. In analyses adjusted for confounders, COVID-19 diagnosis was associated with a…


May 11, 2021

Prevalence of Antibody Positivity to SARS-CoV-2 Following the First Peak of Infection in England: Serial Cross-Sectional Studies of 365,000 Adults

The prevalence of anti-spike SARS-CoV-2 antibodies in England was 5% by the end of September 2020 (prior to the onset of vaccination campaigns), according to three cross-sectional national surveys with non-overlapping random samples undertaken between late June to September (n>365,000). The prevalence of detectable antibodies over the three rounds was 6%, 5%, and 4%. The…


Decreases in Reported Sexually Transmitted Infections during the Time of COVID-19 in King County, WA

Reported cases of gonorrhea and syphilis decreased by 5-22% in King County, Washington from January to July 2020 compared to January to July 2019. Mean weekly case counts of gonorrhea, male urethral gonorrhea, and early latent syphilis decreased during statewide lockdowns in late March, but returned to pre-lockdown levels after reopening in June. The authors…


May 10, 2021

The Role of Media Sources for COVID-19 Information on Engaging in Recommended Preventive Behaviors among Medicare Beneficiaries Aged ≥ 65 Years

Most participants (59%) in a survey of Medicare beneficiaries over age 65 (n = 8,050) administered between June and July 2020 reported relying on traditional news sources (TV, radio, websites, newspapers) for COVID-19 information; other less commonly reported sources included healthcare providers (11%), government officials (11%), webpages/internet (9%), friends/family members (9%), and social media (1%)….


Lives versus Livelihoods? Perceived Economic Risk Has a Stronger Association with Support for COVID-19 Preventive Measures than Perceived Health Risk

Perceptions of risk of suffering from economic loss due to the pandemic were associated with COVID-19 mitigation behavior and support for strict containment measures, while perceptions of health risks had variable effects on behaviors and support, in a cross-sectional study with data collected in 24 countries (N = 25,435). Survey results suggest that globally, respondents tended to…


May 7, 2021

COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy and Its Determinants Among Adults with  a History of Tobacco or Marijuana Use

An internet survey of US adults with a history of tobacco and/or cannabis use (N=387) found that  26% were unwilling to receive a COVID-19 vaccine while another 25% were unsure about willingness  to be vaccinated. Respondents who reported living with 5 or more other persons or by themselves,  living in a suburban or rural area,…


Changes in Emergency Medical Services before and during COVID 19 in the United States, January 2018-December 2020

A retrospective study of emergency medical service activations between 2018 and 2020 found that  while the number of activations decreased in 2020, increases in the proportion of activations for on scene death (1.3% to 2.4%), cardiac arrest (1.3% to 2.2%), and opioid use/overdose (0.6 to 1.6%) were observed compared to 2018-2019. These frequencies subsequently declined…


Emergency Department Visits for Emergent Conditions Among Older  Adults During the COVID -19 Pandemic

A retrospective cohort study of non-COVID related emergency department visits among US adults  found that visits for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stroke, and sepsis declined precipitously  during the early pandemic period and remained lower than pre-pandemic levels through the  summer and fall, particularly among adults age ≥75. In contrast, visits for hip fractures and falls…



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