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Estimating the proportion of Victorians infected with COVID-19 during the Omicron BA.1 epidemic wave of January 2022 in Australia.

Altermatt A, Heath K, Saich F, Lee Wilkinson A, Scott N, Sacks-Davis R, Young K, Stoové M, Gibney KB, Hellard M

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  • Journal Australian and New Zealand journal of public health

  • Published 25 Jan 2023

  • Volume 47

  • ISSUE 1

  • Pagination 100007

  • DOI 10.1016/j.anzjph.2022.100007

Abstract

To estimate the proportion of Victorians infected with COVID-19 in January 2022.

Between 11-19 February 2022 we conducted a nested cross-sectional survey on experiences of COVID-19 testing, symptoms, test outcome and barriers to testing during January 2022 in Victoria, Australia. Respondents were participants of the Optimise Study, a prospective cohort of adults considered at increased risk of COVID-19 or the unintended consequences of COVID-19-related interventions.

Of the 577 participants, 78 (14%) reported testing positive to COVID-19, 240 (42%) did not test in January 2022 and 91 of those who did not test (38%) reported COVID-19-like symptoms. Using two different definitions of symptoms, we calculated symptomatic (27% and 39%) and asymptomatic (4% and 11%) test positivity. We extrapolated these positivity rates to participants who did not test and estimated 19-22% of respondents may have had COVID-19 infection in January 2022.

The proportion of Victorians infected with COVID-19 in January 2022 was likely considerably higher than officially reported numbers.

Our estimate is approximately double the COVID-19 case numbers obtained from official case reporting. This highlights a major limitation of diagnosis data that must be considered when preparing for future waves of infection.