Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe the epidemiology of COVID‐19 in one region of New Zealand in the context of the national lockdown and provide a reference for comparing infection dynamics and control measures between SARS‐Cov‐2 strains. MethodsEpidemiological linking and analysis of COVID‐19 cases and their close contacts residing in the geographical area served by the Southern District Health Board (SDHB). ResultsFrom 13 March to 5 April 5 2020, 186 cases were laboratory‐confirmed with wild‐type Sars‐Cov‐2 in SDHB. Overall, 35·1% of cases were attributable to household transmission, 27·0% to non‐household, 25·4% to overseas travel and 12·4% had no known epidemiological links. The highest secondary attack rate was observed in households during lockdown (15·3%, 95%CI 10·4–21·5). The mean serial interval in 50 exclusive infector‐infectee pairs was 4·0 days (95%CI 3·2–4·7days), and the mean incubation period was 3.4 days (95%CI 2·7–4·2). ConclusionsThe SARS‐CoV‐2 incubation period may be shorter than early estimates that were limited by uncertainties in exposure history or small sample sizes. Implications for public healthThe continuation of household transmission during lockdown highlights the need for effective home‐based quarantine guidance. Our findings of a short incubation period highlight the need to contact trace and isolate as rapidly as possible.

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