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Data System. The REal-time Assessment of Community Transmission-1 (REACT-1) Study was funded by the Department of Health and Social Care in England to provide reliable and timely estimates of prevalence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection over time, by person and place. Data Collection/Processing. The study team (researchers from Imperial College London and its logistics partner Ipsos) wrote to named individuals aged 5 years and older in random cross-sections of the population of England, using the National Health Service list of patients registered with a general practitioner (near-universal coverage) as a sampling frame. We collected data over 2 to 3 weeks approximately every month across 19 rounds of data collection from May 1, 2020, to March 31, 2022. Data Analysis/Dissemination. We have disseminated the data and study materials widely via the study Web site, preprints, publications in peer-reviewed journals, and the media. We make available data tabulations, suitably anonymized to protect participant confidentiality, on request to the study's data access committee. Public Health Implications. The study provided inter alia real-time data on SARS-CoV-2 prevalence over time, by area, and by sociodemographic variables; estimates of vaccine effectiveness; and symptom profiles, and detected emergence of new variants based on viral genome sequencing. (Am J Public Health. 2023;113(5):545-554. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2023.307230).

Original publication

DOI

10.2105/ajph.2023.307230

Type

Journal article

Journal

American journal of public health

Publication Date

05/2023

Volume

113

Pages

545 - 554

Addresses

Paul Elliott, Matthew Whitaker, David Tang, Oliver Eales, Barbara Bodinier, Haowei Wang, Christina Atchison, Deborah Ashby, Helen Ward, and Marc Chadeu-Hyam are with the School of Public Health, Imperial College London, UK. Nicholas Steyn and Christl A. Donnelly are with the Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. Joshua Elliott is with the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London. Ara Darzi is with the Institute of Global Health Innovation, Imperial College London. Wendy Barclay, Graham Taylor, and Graham S. Cooke are with the Department of Infectious Disease, Imperial College London.

Keywords

Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Public Health, State Medicine, England, COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2