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. 2020 Oct 2;15(10):e0239886.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239886. eCollection 2020.

Web and phone-based COVID-19 syndromic surveillance in Canada: A cross-sectional study

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Web and phone-based COVID-19 syndromic surveillance in Canada: A cross-sectional study

Lauren Lapointe-Shaw et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Syndromic surveillance through web or phone-based polling has been used to track the course of infectious diseases worldwide. Our study objective was to describe the characteristics, symptoms, and self-reported testing rates of respondents in three different COVID-19 symptom surveys in Canada.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional study using three distinct Canada-wide web-based surveys, and phone polling in Ontario. All three sources contained self-reported information on COVID-19 symptoms and testing. In addition to describing respondent characteristics, we examined symptom frequency and the testing rate among the symptomatic, as well as rates of symptoms and testing across respondent groups.

Results: We found that over March- April 2020, 1.6% of respondents experienced a symptom on the day of their survey, 15% of Ontario households had a symptom in the previous week, and 44% of Canada-wide respondents had a symptom in the previous month. Across the three surveys, SARS-CoV-2-testing was reported in 2-9% of symptomatic responses. Women, younger and middle-aged adults (versus older adults) and Indigenous/First nations/Inuit/Métis were more likely to report at least one symptom, and visible minorities were more likely to report the combination of fever with cough or shortness of breath.

Interpretation: The low rate of testing among those reporting symptoms suggests significant opportunity to expand testing among community-dwelling residents of Canada. Syndromic surveillance data can supplement public health reports and provide much-needed context to gauge the adequacy of SARS-CoV-2 testing rates.

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Conflict of interest statement

WJ Schatten is a paid employee of Forum Research. This commercial affiliation does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. II Bogoch has consulted to BlueDot, a social benefit corporation that tracks the spread of emerging infectious diseases. The remaining authors have no disclosures.

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