A psychiatric hospital in Wyoming shared its experience with COVID-19 prevention. The facility admitted two patients who had COVID-19 and described the steps it took to try to prevent the virus from spreading to other patients and staff. The report does not provide specific numbers about how many people might have gotten sick or whether the measures successfully stopped transmission.
This is a case report, which means it describes what one hospital did in a specific situation. We don't know how many people were involved, what specific outcomes were tracked, or how long they followed the situation. The report doesn't mention any safety problems that occurred, but it also doesn't provide data showing whether the prevention measures worked as intended.
Because this is just one facility's experience without detailed results, readers should be careful about drawing conclusions. We can't tell from this report which prevention steps were most helpful or whether they would work in other settings. The main value is understanding how one psychiatric facility responded to COVID-19 cases, not learning proven strategies for prevention.
If you work in healthcare or are concerned about infection control in group settings, this report shows how one hospital approached the challenge. However, for evidence about what actually prevents COVID-19 transmission, you would need to look at larger studies with clear results and comparisons.