• Contact tracing in Argentina

Contact Tracing Knowledge Hub

Welcome to PAHO's Contact Tracing Knowledge Hub

The hub offers multidisciplinary information on Contact Tracing for a variety of audiences from policymakers, to responders, researchers, educators, affected communities, and the public. 

This hub is a public platform for access to the best and most up-to-date resources available to support your contact tracing programs and activities.

 

 

Announcement

Contact tracing and quarantine in the context of the Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variant: Interim Guidance

15 February 2022

In response to the current wave of COVID-19 cases due to the Omicron variant of concern, WHO has published interim guidance to reflect the following changes to contact tracing and quarantine:

  • Countries may consider shortening the quarantine period to 7 days with the addition of a PCR or Ag-RDT administered by qualified personnel and could be ended after day 10 without testing if the contact presents no symptoms (WHO does not at this time recommend self-administered tests to shorten quarantine).
  • Recently vaccinated contacts (<90 days) can be considered as lower priority for contact tracing or undergo the previously mentioned shorter quarantine where resources are limited and/or health systems are overstretched.
  • Contacts who have been infected in a context where Omicron is the dominant variant (i.e. whose infection was likely caused by Omicron) could quarantine for a shorter period, as they could be considered a lower priority in settings where contact tracing and quarantine capacities are stretched.
  • When the health system is under extreme pressure because of a high caseload and when many health workers are off work due to exposures or infections, health workers who have had high-risk exposure but have received a vaccination booster or recovered from SARS-CoV-2 infection within 90 days may continue to work with no quarantine if they are asymptomatic.

Contact Tracing Technical Guidelines

Contact Tracing
PAHO

 

5 August 2021

Contact Tracing Dashboard

Between February and April 2021, an online survey consisting of three questions was emailed to surveillance focal points from each PAHO country office in the Region to document the availability of contact tracing strategies. 

 

The benefits of contact tracing in the Region depend substantially on clear and defined strategies that outline cohesive contact definitions, processes of monitoring and reporting key indicators, and include recommendations on data collection and analysis tools.

National Strategy for Contact Tracing: a written document (published or unpublished) or guideline that outlines the mechanism for contact tracing activities including, but not limited to, contact definition, period of contact, monitoring of contacts, testing of contacts, and duration of the quarantine.

Monitoring of Contact Tracing Performance or Impact Indicators: the collection of data that facilitates the calculation of one or more of the WHO-recommended indicators for contact tracing.

Digital Contact Tracing Tool or Application: technology that supports the identification, data collection, or follow-up of contacts, symptom trackers as applications used to collect self-reported symptoms, and proximity trackers as applications used to measure proximity and activate alerts to close contacts of an index case when both have downloaded the application.

 

 

Additional Resources

:: Training

Contact Tracing Courses

Courses of Risk Communication

Courses of Community Engagement

Courses of Go.Data

Miscelaneous

:: Go.Data

What is Go.Data? Go.Data  is an outbreak investigation tool for field data collection during public health emergencies. The tool includes functionality for case investigation, contact follow-up, visualization of chains of transmission including secure data exchange and is designed for flexibility in the field, to adapt to the wide range of outbreak scenarios. The tool is targeted at any outbreak responder.

Documents

Communications Materials

All