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1.
J Assoc Med Microbiol Infect Dis Can ; 6(4): 245-258, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1566623

ABSTRACT

An effective strategy to control the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic takes into account inputs from many domains, including community epidemiology, surveillance and testing, contact tracing capacity, support for vulnerable populations, and health care system strain. Provincial and federal governments currently lack a universal approach to presenting relevant pandemic data from these domains to the general public in a way that engages them in decision making and promotes adherence to policies. We propose a framework to analyze COVID-19 pandemic data on an ongoing basis using inputs from these five domains, which can be scaled to the local public health unit, provincial, or national level. Data analysis was qualitative and semi-quantitative because there was a paucity of publicly available data on surveillance and testing, contact tracing, and health care system strain, which limited our ability to perform internal and external validation of our model. We urge the federal government to mandate a core set of reporting items across local, provincial, and federal jurisdictions that may then be used to perform validation and implementation of our proposed framework.


Une stratégie efficace pour contrôler la pandémie continue de maladie à coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) tient compte de l'apport de divers domaines, soit l'épidémiologie communautaire, la surveillance et le dépistage, la capacité de traçage des contacts, le soutien de populations vulnérables et la souche du système de santé. À l'heure actuelle, les gouvernements provinciaux et fédéral ne proposent pas de démarche universelle pour présenter des données pertinentes sur ces domaines de la pandémie au grand public, de manière à le faire participer aux prises de décision et à promouvoir l'adhésion aux politiques. Les auteurs proposent un outil pour procéder à l'analyse des données sur la pandémie de COVID-19 à partir des données de ces cinq domaines, qui peut être adapté pour les unités sanitaires locales, provinciales ou nationale. L'analyse des données était qualitative et semi-quantitative en raison du peu de données publiques sur la surveillance et le dépistage, le traçage des contacts et la souche du système de santé, qui ont limité notre capacité de procéder à une validation interne et externe de notre modèle par l'analyse quantitative. Les auteurs exhortent le gouvernement fédéral à mandater un ensemble d'éléments à signaler dans les régions sociosanitaires locales, provinciales et fédérale qui peuvent ensuite utilisés pour valider mettre en œuvre le cadre proposé.

2.
J Cutan Med Surg ; 26(2): 189-197, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1477178

ABSTRACT

Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) skin manifestations have been increasingly reported in medical literature. Recent discussions have identified a lack of images of skin of color (SOC) patients with COVID-19 related skin findings despite people with skin of color being disproportionately affected with the disease. There have been calls to prioritize the identification of COVID-19 skin manifestations in patients with SOC and disseminate these findings. The objective of this article is to review the existing literature on COVID-19 skin manifestations and, where possible, discuss how they may present differently in patients with SOC. Further research is needed to allow primary care physicians and dermatologists to be aware of and easily identify patients with cutaneous findings that may be secondary to COVID-19. Patients presenting with idiopathic dermatologic manifestations should be considered for COVID-19 testing and follow public health guidelines for self-isolation.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Skin Diseases , COVID-19/complications , COVID-19 Testing , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Skin Diseases/diagnosis , Skin Diseases/etiology , Skin Pigmentation
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