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1.
Preprint em Inglês | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21265758

RESUMO

Four rounds of serological surveys were conducted, spanning two COVID waves (October 2020 and April-May 2021), in Tamil Nadu (population 72 million) state in India. Each round included representative populations in each district of the state, totaling [≥]20,000 persons per round. State-level seroprevalence was 31.5% in round 1 (October-November 2020), after Indias first COVID wave. Seroprevalence fell to 22.9% in 2 (April 2021), consistent with waning of antibodies from natural infection. Seroprevalence rose to 67.1% by round 3 (June-July 2021), reflecting infections from the Delta-variant induced second COVID wave. Seroprevalence rose to 93.1% by round 4 (December 2021-January 2022), reflecting higher vaccination rates. Antibodies also appear to wane after vaccination. Seroprevalence in urban areas was higher than in rural areas, but the gap shrunk over time (35.7 v. 25.7% in round 1, 89.8% v. 91.4% in round 4) as the epidemic spread even in low-density rural areas. Article Summary LineAntibodies waned after Indias first COVID wave and both vaccination and infection contributed its roughly 90% seroprevalence after its second wave.

2.
Preprint em Inglês | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21250949

RESUMO

A population-representative serological study was conducted in all districts of the state of Tamil Nadu (population 72 million), India, in October-November 2020. State-level seroprevalence was 31.6%. However, this masks substantial variation across the state. Seroprevalence ranged from just 11.1% in The Nilgris to 51.0% in Perambalur district. Seroprevalence in urban areas (36.9%) was higher than in rural areas (26.9%). Females (30.8%) had similar seroprevalence to males (30.3%). However, working age populations (age 40-49: 31.6%) have significantly higher seroprevalence than the youth (age 18-29: 30.7%) or elderly (age 70+: 25.8%). Estimated seroprevalence implies that at least 22.6 million persons were infected by the end of November, roughly 36 times the number of confirmed cases. Estimated seroprevalence implies an infection fatality rate of 0.052%.

3.
Preprint em Inglês | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21249264

RESUMO

There are very few estimates of the age-specific infection fatality rate (IFR) of SARS-CoV-2 in low- and middle-income countries. India reports the second highest number of SARS-CoV-2 infections in the world. We estimate age-specific IFR using data from seroprevalence surveys in Mumbai (population 12 million) and Karnataka (population 61 million), and a random sample of economically distressed migrants in Bihar with mortality followup. Among men aged 50-89, IFR is 0.12% in Karnataka (95% C.I. 0.09%-0.15%), 0.53% in Mumbai (0.52%-0.54%), and 5.64% among migrants in Bihar (0-11.16%). IFR in India is approximately twice as high for men as for women, is heterogeneous across contexts, and rises much less at older ages than in comparable studies from high income countries.

4.
Preprint em Inglês | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20138545

RESUMO

India has reported the fourth highest number of confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases worldwide. Because there is little community testing for COVID, this case count is likely an underestimate. When India partially exited from lockdown on May 4, 2020, millions of daily laborers left cities for their rural family homes. RNA testing on a near-random sample of laborers returning to the state of Bihar is used to estimate positive testing rate for COVID across India for a 6-week period immediately following the initial lifting of Indias lockdown. Positive testing rates among returning laborers are only moderately correlated with, and 21% higher than, Indian states official reports, which are not based on random sampling. Higher prevalence among returning laborers may also reflect greater COVID spread in crowded poor communities such as slums.

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