key: cord-0765068-nvq5o8ws authors: Fontán-Vela, Mario; Gullón, Pedro; Padilla-Bernáldez, Javier title: Reply to "Integral management of COVID-19 in Madrid: Turning things around during the second wave" date: 2021-04-30 journal: The Lancet Regional Health - Europe DOI: 10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100067 sha: 1070ef0bc8ea2d19c2f56c10471bd3e42f7f52c3 doc_id: 765068 cord_uid: nvq5o8ws nan Reply to "Integral management of COVID-19 in Madrid: Turning things around during the second wave" Mario Font an-Vela a,b , Pedro Gull on b,c, *, Javier Padilla-Bern aldez c,d We have read with great interest the comment written by Candel et al. [1] about how Madrid developed an integral management to overcome COVID-19 pandemic's second wave in august-october. However, this analysis requires some clarifications. First, both Basic Health Zones (BHZ) perimeter lockdowns and antigen test introduction were implemented once COVID-19 incidence rate was already going down. By performing a joinpoint regression analysis to compare the confined BHA and those with high incidence that were not, we found that, in both cases, the change in trend occurred before the entry in force of these measures [2] . Second, the lack of additional public health measures aimed at radically cutting transmission led Madrid to a sustained levels of COVID-19 transmission defined as "high risk" [3] with over 150 cases/100000 inhabitants 14-day incidence rate since mid-August, and a continuous high hospital occupancy and Intensive Care Units occupancy rate. This placed the health services in a very weak position to face the third pandemic wave, and might have deteriorated and delayed the attention to other pathologies different from COVID-19 [4] . Finally, after eleven months of COVID-19 pandemic, Madrid continues to have an ineffective contact tracing system, being one of Spain's regions with less tracing capability (only 167% cases are currently being traced) [5] . The COVID-19 pandemic is leaving us many lessons. A more comprehensive public health approach is needed to tackle the impact of COVID-19 syndemic on previous and new health and social inequities. The knowledge acquired has to be used to transform public health response structures, and that in Madrid does not seem to have been done. All the authors disclose non conflict of interest. Integral management of COVID-19 in Madrid: Turning things around during the second wave Selective perimeter lockdowns in Madrid: a way to bend the COVID-19 curve? SocArXiv 2020 Available from Actuaciones de respuesta coordinada para el control de la transmisi on de COVID-19 Impact of COVID-19 on ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction care. The Spanish experience Indicadores principales de seguimiento de COVID-19