The COVID-19 global pandemic has disrupted structures and communities across the globe. Numerous regions of the world have had varying responses in their attempts to contain the spread of the virus. Varying factors such as public health policies, governance, and sociopolitical factors, have led to differential levels of success at controlling the spread of SARS-CoV-2. Ultimately, a more advanced surveillance metric for COVID-19 transmission is necessary to help government systems and national leaders understand which responses have been effective and gauge where outbreaks occur. ; PR ; IFPRI3; ISI; 3 Building Inclusive and Efficient Markets, Trade Systems, and Food Industry; 5 Strengthening Institutions and Governance; COVID-19 Policy Response (CPR) Portal; CRP2 ; DSGD; PIM ; CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM)
Background: COVID-19 transmission rates in South Asia initially were under control when governments implemented health policies aimed at controlling the pandemic such as quarantines, travel bans, and border-, business-, and school-closures. Governments have since relaxed public health guidelines which resulted in significant outbreaks moving the global epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic to India. Systematic ongoing public health surveillance of the COVID-19 is needed to inform disease prevention policy to re-establish control of the pandemic within the region. Objective: To inform public health leaders about the state of the COVID-19 pandemic, how South Asia differs within and between countries and from other global regions and where immediate action is needed to control the outbreaks. Methods: We extracted 62 days of COVID-19 data from public health registries and calculated traditional and enhanced surveillance metrics. We use an empirical difference equation to measure the daily number of cases in South Asia as a function of the prior number of cases, the level of testing, and weekly shift variables based on a dynamic panel model that was estimated using the generalized method of moments approach by implementing the Arellano-Bond estimator in R. Results: Traditional surveillance metrics signal that South Asian countries have an alarming outbreak with India leading the region with 310,310 new daily cases using the 7-day moving average. Enhanced surveillance indicates that while Pakistan and Bangladesh still have a high daily number of new COVID-19 transmissions, 4,819 and 3,878, respectively, their speed of new infections declined from April 12-25, 2021 from 2.28 to 2.18 and 3.15 to 2.35 daily new infections per 100,000 population, respectively, signaling their outbreaks are contracting and heading in the right direction. In contrast, India's speed of new infections per 100,000 population increased by 52% during the same time period from 14.79 to 22.49 new cases per day per 100,000 which constitutes an outbreak. Conclusions: Relaxed public health restrictions plus novel variants fueled the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in South Asia. Public health surveillance signals that shifts made to policy plus new variants correlate with a dramatic expansion in the pandemic requiring immediate action to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Surveillance is needed to inform leaders if policies result in pandemic control. ; PR ; IFPRI3; COVID-19 Policy Response (CPR) Portal; CRP2; 3 Building Inclusive and Efficient Markets, Trade Systems, and Food Industry; 4 Transforming Agricultural and Rural Economies; 5 Strengthening Institutions and Governance; Feed the Future Initiative; ISI ; DSGD; PIM ; CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM)