Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:johnsa46

in-biosketch:yes

Total Results:

4


COVID-19 Case Investigation and Contact Tracing in New York City, June 1, 2020, to October 31, 2021

Blaney, Kathleen; Foerster, Steffen; Baumgartner, Jennifer; Benckert, Megan; Blake, Janice; Bray, Jackie; Chamany, Shadi; Devinney, Katelynn; Fine, Annie; Gindler, Masha; Guerra, Laura; Johnson, Amanda; Keeley, Chris; Lee, David; Lipsit, Mia; McKenney, Sarah; Misra, Kavita; Perl, Sarah; Peters, Dana; Ray, Madhury; Saad, Eduardo; Thomas, Guajira; Trieu, Lisa; Udeagu, Chi-Chi; Watkins, Julian; Wong, Marcia; Zielinski, Lindsay; Long, Theodore; Vora, Neil M
IMPORTANCE:Contact tracing is a core strategy for preventing the spread of many infectious diseases of public health concern. Better understanding of the outcomes of contact tracing for COVID-19 as well as the operational opportunities and challenges in establishing a program for a jurisdiction as large as New York City (NYC) is important for the evaluation of this strategy. OBJECTIVE:To describe the establishment, scaling, and maintenance of Trace, NYC's contact tracing program, and share data on outcomes during its first 17 months. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:This cross-sectional study included people with laboratory test-confirmed and probable COVID-19 and their contacts in NYC between June 1, 2020, and October 31, 2021. Trace launched on June 1, 2020, and had a workforce of 4147 contact tracers, with the majority of the workforce performing their jobs completely remotely. Data were analyzed in March 2022. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES:Number and proportion of persons with COVID-19 and contacts on whom investigations were attempted and completed; timeliness of interviews relative to symptom onset or exposure for symptomatic cases and contacts, respectively. RESULTS:Case investigations were attempted for 941 035 persons. Of those, 840 922 (89.4%) were reached and 711 353 (75.6%) completed an intake interview (women and girls, 358 775 [50.4%]; 60 178 [8.5%] Asian, 110 636 [15.6%] Black, 210 489 [28.3%] Hispanic or Latino, 157 349 [22.1%] White). Interviews were attempted for 1 218 650 contacts. Of those, 904 927 (74.3%) were reached, and 590 333 (48.4%) completed intake (women and girls, 219 261 [37.2%]; 47 403 [8.0%] Asian, 98 916 [16.8%] Black, 177 600 [30.1%] Hispanic or Latino, 116 559 [19.7%] White). Completion rates were consistent over time and resistant to changes related to vaccination as well as isolation and quarantine guidance. Among symptomatic cases, median time from symptom onset to intake completion was 4.7 days; a median 1.4 contacts were identified per case. Median time from contacts' last date of exposure to intake completion was 2.3 days. Among contacts, 30.1% were tested within 14 days of notification. Among cases, 27.8% were known to Trace as contacts. The overall expense for Trace from May 6, 2020, through October 31, 2021, was approximately $600 million. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:Despite the complexity of developing a contact tracing program in a diverse city with a population of over 8 million people, in this case study we were able to identify 1.4 contacts per case and offer resources to safely isolate and quarantine to over 1 million cases and contacts in this study period.
PMCID:9631107
PMID: 36322090
ISSN: 2574-3805
CID: 5417902

An Unconditional Cash Transfer Program for Low-Income New Yorkers Affected by COVID-19

Kumar, Samantha Lily; Calvo-Friedman, Alessandra; Freeman, Amy L; Fazio, Daniela; Johnson, Amanda K; Seiferth, Fionnuala; Clapp, Jenifer; Davis, Nichola J; Schretzman, Maryanne; Springer, Bethany; Arcilla, Harmony N; Kaplan, Sue A; Berry, Carolyn A; Doran, Kelly M
Early in the pandemic, New York City's public hospital system partnered with multiple philanthropic foundations to offer an unconditional cash transfer program for low-income New Yorkers affected by COVID-19. The $1000 cash transfers were designed to help people meet their most immediate health and social needs and were incorporated into healthcare delivery and contact tracing workflows as a response to the public health emergency. To better understand program recipients' experiences, researchers conducted 150 telephone surveys with randomly sampled cash transfer recipients and 20 in-depth qualitative interviews with purposefully sampled survey participants. Survey participants were predominantly Latinx (87%) and women (65%). The most common reported uses of the $1000 were food and rent. Most participants (79%) reported that without the $1000 cash transfer they would have had difficulty paying for basic expenses or making ends meet, with specific positive effects reported related to food, housing, and ability to work. The majority of survey participants reported that receiving the cash assistance somewhat or greatly improved their physical health (83%) and mental health (89%). Qualitative interview results generally supported the survey findings.
PMCID:9555690
PMID: 36224486
ISSN: 1468-2869
CID: 5341042

Access and Analytics: What the Military Can Teach Us About Health Equity [Comment]

Lopez, Leo; Chen, Kevin; Hart, Lou; Johnson, Amanda K
PMID: 34878876
ISSN: 1541-0048
CID: 5109492

THE PORT PRACTICES - CONNECTING INDIVIDUALS RELEASED FROM NYC JAILS TO MEDICAL CARE AND SUPPORTIVE SERVICES [Meeting Abstract]

Goodwin, Alexandra M.; Kladney, Mat; Rosner, Zachary; Martelle, Michelle; Epstein, Ellie; Jackson, Hannah; Johnson, Amanda; Singh, Deomattie; Wiersema, Janet J.; Dreamer, Lucas; Holmes, Isaac; MacDonald, Ross; Yang, Patricia; Long, Theodore G.; Wallach, Andrew B.
ISI:000567143602215
ISSN: 0884-8734
CID: 4800072