Updated Surveillance Metrics and History of the COVID-19 Pandemic (2020-2023) in Canada: Longitudinal Trend Analysis

This study provides an update on the status of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, building upon our initial analysis conducted in 2020 by incorporating an additional 2 years of data. This study aims to (1) summarize the status of the pandemic in Canada when the World Health Organization (WHO) declared...

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Veröffentlicht in:JMIR public health and surveillance 2024-12, Vol.10, p.e53218
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Scott A, Soetikno, Alan G, Ozer, Egon A, Welch, Sarah B, Liu, Yingxuan, Havey, Robert J, Murphy, Robert L, Hawkins, Claudia, Mason, Maryann, Post, Lori A, Achenbach, Chad J, Lundberg, Alexander L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study provides an update on the status of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, building upon our initial analysis conducted in 2020 by incorporating an additional 2 years of data. This study aims to (1) summarize the status of the pandemic in Canada when the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the end of the public health emergency for the COVID-19 pandemic on May 5, 2023; (2) use dynamic and genomic surveillance methods to describe the history of the pandemic in Canada and situate the window of the WHO declaration within the broader history; and (3) provide historical context for the course of the pandemic in Canada. This longitudinal study analyzed trends in traditional surveillance data and dynamic panel estimates for COVID-19 transmissions and deaths in Canada from June 2020 to May 2023. We also used sequenced SARS-CoV-2 variants from the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data (GISAID) to identify the appearance and duration of variants of concern. For these sequences, we used Nextclade nomenclature to collect clade designations and Pangolin nomenclature for lineage designations of SARS-CoV-2. We used 1-sided t tests of dynamic panel regression coefficients to measure the persistence of COVID-19 transmissions around the WHO declaration. Finally, we conducted a 1-sided t test for whether provincial and territorial weekly speed was greater than an outbreak threshold of 10. We ran the test iteratively with 6 months of data across the sample period. Canada's speed remained below the outbreak threshold for 8 months by the time of the WHO declaration ending the COVID-19 emergency of international concern. Acceleration and jerk were also low and stable. While the 1-day persistence coefficient remained statistically significant and positive (1.074; P
ISSN:2369-2960
2369-2960
DOI:10.2196/53218