Background Understanding the spatiotemporal distribution of emerging infectious diseases is crucial for implementation of control measures. In the first 7 months from the occurrence of COVID-19 pandemic, Vietnam has documented comparatively few cases of COVID-19. Understanding the spatiotemporal distribution of these cases may contribute to development of global countermeasures. Methods We assessed the spatiotemporal distribution of COVID-19 from 23 January to 31 July 2020 in Vietnam. Data were collected from reports of the World Health Organization, the Vietnam Ministry of Health, and related websites. Temporal distribution was assessed via the transmission classification (local or quarantined cases). Geographical distribution was assessed via the number of cases in each province along with their timelines. The most likely disease clusters with elevated incidence were assessed via calculation of the relative risk (RR). Results Among 544 observed cases of COVID-19, the median age was 35 years, 54.8% were men, and 50.9% were diagnosed during quarantine. During the observation period, there were four phases: Phase 1, COVID-19 cases occurred sporadically in January and February 2020; Phase 2, an epidemic wave occurred from the 1st week of March to the middle of April (Wave 1); Phase 3, only quarantining cases were involved; and Phase 4, a second epidemic wave began on July 25th, 2020 (Wave 2). A spatial cluster in Phase 1 was detected in Vinh Phuc Province (RR, 38.052). In Phase 2, primary spatial clusters were identified in the areas of Hanoi and Ha Nam Province (RR, 6.357). In Phase 4, a spatial cluster was detected in Da Nang, a popular coastal tourist destination (RR, 70.401). Conclusions Spatial disease clustering of COVID-19 in Vietnam was associated with large cities, tourist destinations, people’s mobility, and the occurrence of nosocomial infections. Past experiences with outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases led to quick implementation of governmental countermeasures against COVID-19 and a general acceptance of these measures by the population. The behaviors of the population and the government, as well as the country’s age distribution, may have contributed to the low incidence and small number of severe COVID-19 cases. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12879-021-06822-0.
【저자키워드】 COVID-19, Nosocomial infection, Emerging infectious disease, Spatiotemporal analysis, Disease clustering, 【초록키워드】 pandemic, Infectious diseases, severe COVID-19, quarantine, Phase 2, COVID-19 pandemic, Emerging infectious diseases, risk, Local, Transmission, Infectious disease, Relative risk, Measures, outbreak, implementation, Clustering, Cluster, understanding, age, incidence, distribution, disease, COVID-19 cases, phase, Nosocomial infections, Phase 1, Health Organization, geographical distribution, temporal distribution, age distribution, epidemic wave, phase 4, World Health Organization, Government, Wave, transmission classification, Vinh Phuc Province, supplementary material, COVID-19 case, median age, observation period, measure, calculation, middle, timelines, men, Ministry of Health, spatiotemporal, Occurrence, Result, collected, occurred, diagnosed, elevated, contribute, contributed, Temporal, occurrence of COVID-19, the median, were assessed, 【제목키워드】 distribution, the epidemic,