key: cord-0759622-gcwh59eh authors: Ferrante, Daniel; Macchia, Alejandro; González Villa Monte, Gabriel Alejo; Battistella, Gabriel; Baum, Analía; Zingoni, Paula; Angeleri, Patricia; Biscayart, Cristián; Walton, Carolina; Marcó, Florencia Flax; Esteban, Santiago; Mariani, Javier; Bernaldo de Quirós, Fernán González title: Use of alternative care sites during the COVID-19 pandemic in the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina date: 2021-03-05 journal: Public Health DOI: 10.1016/j.puhe.2021.02.022 sha: 0a057e0365c54afbd3254d81d4634bd33ef65266 doc_id: 759622 cord_uid: gcwh59eh Objectives In large cities, where a large proportion of the population live in poverty and overcrowding, orders to stay home to comply with isolation requirements are difficult to fulfil. In this article, the use of alternative care sites (ACS) for the isolation of patients with confirmed COVID-19 or persons under investigation (PUI) in the City of Buenos Aires during the first wave of COVID-19 are described. Study design Cross-sectional study. Methods All COVID-19 patients and PUI with insufficient housing resources who could not comply with orders to stay home and who were considered at low clinical risk in the initial triage, were referred to refurbished hotels in the City of Buenos Aires (Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires [CABA]). ACS were divided into those for confirmed COVID-19 patients and those for PUI. Results From March to August 2020, there were 58,143 reported cases of COVID-19 (13,829 of whom lived in slums) in the CABA. For COVID-19 positive cases, 62.1% (n = 8587) of those living in slums and 21.4% (n = 9498) of those living outside the slums were housed in an ACS. In total, 31.1% (n = 18,085) of confirmed COVID-19 cases were housed in ACS. In addition, 7728 PUI were housed (3178 from the slums) in an ACS. The average length of stay was 9.0 ± 2.5 days for patients with COVID-19 and 1.6 ± 0.7 days for PUI. For the individuals who were housed in an ACS, 1314 (5.1%) had to be hospitalised, 56 were in critical care units (0.22%) and there were 27 deaths (0.1%), none during their stay in an ACS. Conclusions Overall, about one-third of all people with COVID-19 were referred to an ACS in the CABA. For slum dwellers, the proportion was >60%. The need for hospitalisation was low and severe clinical events were rare. This strategy reduced the pressure on hospitals so their efforts could be directed to patients with moderate-to-severe disease. hospitalisation was low and severe clinical events were rare. This strategy reduced the pressure on hospitals so their efforts could be directed to patients with moderate-tosevere disease. Testing and rapid isolation of patients with COVID-19 is one of the undisputed cornerstones of the strategy to deal with the pandemic (1) . Effective isolation is, however, difficult to manage in practice (2) . In big cities, where poverty conglomerates in slums and collective housing is characterised by overcrowding, the real possibility of effective isolation is low (2) (3) (4) . Although the 'stay at home' orders are universal, its value as a message is shaped by the real feasibility of complying with these directives. The City of Buenos Aires (Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires [CABA] ) is the capital city of Argentina, with a population of approximately 3.1 million. As in other Latin-American cities, there are conglomerates of urban poverty, characterised by a lack of basic services and overcrowding, in neighbourhoods called 'villas' (slums). There are also other forms of precarious housing, such as collective housing that share some of these challenges. In CABA, around 230,000 people live slums and another 100,000 live in collective housing. The slums are characterised by high population density, precarious basic services and overcrowding. The availability of hospital beds is critical in an epidemic and these should be prioritised for moderate and severe cases. Most patients with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 can spend the course of their illness at home (5) . However, when this is not possible, the J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f use of alternative care sites (ACS) is an option to reduce the spread of the disease in the community (6) . Although there are guidelines that suggest the use of ACS as a potential source of patient reception (7), there is, to the best of our knowledge, no documentation of a large-scale experience of the use of ACS for isolation of people with COVID-19. Data from laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases and persons under investigation (PUI) reported to SISA (Sistema Integrado de Información Sanitaria Argentino) from all health centres in the CABA between 22 March and 1 August 2020 were analysed. All health centres report COVID-19 cases and PUI using a standardised case report form that collects demographic and clinical data, as well as patient outcomes including hospitalisations, intensive care unit (ICU) admissions and deaths. All patients who consulted the public health system were scored in an initial triage. In this assessment, clinical risk was determined based on demographic data, pre-existing conditions, oxygen saturation and vital signs. In addition, all individuals were socially stratified according to their living conditions and their actual ability to remain isolated at home. All patients and PUI considered to be at low clinical risk and with insufficient housing conditions to perform an isolation were housed in an ACS. ACS are defined according to established definitions as "structures of opportunity to provide a safe and comfortable setting where patients can be isolated and monitored during the COVID-19 pandemic" (8) . All the ACS in the CABA were intended to be nonacute care centres. ACS were intended to provide assistance to COVID-19 patients who J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f were asymptomatic and/or mildly symptomatic and who did not require oxygen, nursing or assistance with daily activities. Given the potential for patient health to rapidly deteriorate, even at the non-acute care level and with low-risk patients, all ACS were provided with an assisting team that included nurses, physicians and technical staff. The experience of the city of Buenos Aires has proved to be feasible with a pragmatic approach. During the initial stages of the pandemic, slum residents had a significantly higher COVID-19 incidence rate than the rest of the city (8). However, due to their demographic composition, most of the sick were considered to be at low clinical risk. In this population, the conditions of overcrowding made effective isolation unlikely. These two situations constituted ideal conditions for the implementation of low complexity ACS. To this end, the Ministry of Health of the City of Buenos Aires refurbished a total of 46 hotels that were closed during the pandemic, and equipped them with medical staff, non-medical assistants, nurses and administrative personnel. Nearly one-third of COVID-19 patients in the CABA were housed in an ACS, which rose to two-thirds for COVID-19 individuals residing in the slums. The ACS system reduced the number of COVID-19 patients attending hospital; thus, hospital bed occupancy rate remained in a non-critical situation during the period studied. Only 5% of those housed in the ACS had to be hospitalised and the percentage of people requiring mechanical ventilation was very low. No patient had serious events during their stay in the ACS. While the ACS experience described here may be considered a management success, it also reveals a failure that goes beyond the control of infections. It is well known that a large number of people live in poverty in the CABA; however, the COVID-19 pandemic J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f has highlighted enormous social collectives that rarely participate in the numerator of classical epidemiology. On this occasion, their visibility and vulnerability, rightly, mobilised resources and actions that were not present in other dramatic but socially less dangerous situations, such as tuberculosis (9) and non-communicable diseases (10) . Among the many challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, one of the most important is to find the mechanisms so that what constituted a contingency plan can become a permanent presence that guarantees responses and rights to vulnerable populations. This survey falls outside of the national requirement for ethical review. The current legal norm (resolution1480e11) in Argentina in relation to the obligations regarding clinical research allows exceptions to the registration of informed consent. None decalred. The researchers donated their time to carry out this work. Impact of self-imposed prevention measures and short-term governmentimposed social distancing on mitigating and delaying a COVID-19 epidemic: A modelling study Slum Health: Arresting COVID-19 and Improving Well-Being in Urban Informal Settlements The history, geography, and sociology of slums and the health problems of people who live in slums Improving the health and welfare of people who live in slums Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis to prioritize hospital admission of patients affected by COVID-19 in low-resource settings with hospital-bed shortage Alternative Care Sites for the Covid-19 Pandemic: The Early U.S. and U.K. Experience. NEJM Catal Innov Care Deliv Federal Healthcare Resilience Task Force Alternate Care Site Toolkit: Third Edition Date Published: 6/30/2020 et alCOVID-19 among the inhabitants of the slums in the city of Buenos Aires: a population-based study Evaluación del primer nivel de atención para el control de la tuberculosis en Buenos Aires, Argentina [Evaluation of the first level of care for tuberculosis control in Buenos Aires, Argentina Avaliação da atenção primária à saúde no controle da tuberculose em Cardiovascular and other risk factors among people who live in slums in None declared.