Towards better contact-tracing in the UK
Autor
Kendall, Michelle
Milsom, Luke
Abeler-Dörner, Lucie
Wymant, Chris
Ferretti, Luca
Briers, Prof Mark
Institución
Resumen
As a second pandemic wave breaks over much of the
world, the need for sustainable and effective test,
trace, and isolate programmes is more pressing than
ever. The study by Michelle Kendall and colleagues1
in
The Lancet Digital Health is thus welcome and timely.
This assessment of the effect of the pilot UK Test and
Trace programme on the Isle of Wight provides indirect,
yet convincing, evidence of success in reducing the
effective reproduction number, and thereby the
size of the first wave. However, it is unclear how the
programme will fare when expanded to settings that
are less ideal than the Isle of Wight, given its small
population size and distinct natural boundaries.
Adaptations might be needed to exploit ambitious
targets for testing volumes set by the UK Government,2
and the success of the programme hinges on accessible
testing to identify infections rapidly and allow tracing
to occur before infected contacts infect others. More
broadly, different approaches to test, trace, and isolate
could underlie the marked differences in the impact
of COVID-19 across different parts of the world.