TY - JOUR
T1 - Differences in how interventions coupled with effective reproduction numbers account for marked variations in COVID-19 epidemic outcomes
AU - Xia, Fan
AU - Xiao, Yanni
AU - Liu, Peiyu
AU - Cheke, Robert A.
AU - Li, Xuanya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 the Author(s), licensee AIMS Press.
PY - 2020/7/27
Y1 - 2020/7/27
N2 - The COVID-19 outbreak, designated a "pandemic"by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020, has spread worldwide rapidly. Each country implemented prevention and control strategies, mainly classified as SARS LCS (SARS-like containment strategy) or PAIN LMS (pandemic influenza-like mitigation strategy). The reasons for variation in each strategy's efficacy in controlling COVID-19 epidemics were unclear and are investigated in this paper. On the basis of the daily number of confirmed local (imported) cases and onset-to-confirmation distributions for local cases, we initially estimated the daily number of local (imported) illness onsets by a deconvolution method for mainland China, South Korea, Japan and Spain, and then estimated the effective reproduction numbers Rt by using a Bayesian method for each of the four countries. China and South Korea adopted a strict SARS LCS, to completely block the spread via lockdown, strict travel restrictions and by detection and isolation of patients, which led to persistent declines in effective reproduction numbers. In contrast, Japan and Spain adopted a typical PAIN LMS to mitigate the spread via maintaining social distance, self-quarantine and isolation etc., which reduced the Rt values but with oscillations around 1. The finding suggests that governments may need to consider multiple factors such as quantities of medical resources, the likely extent of the public's compliance to different intensities of intervention measures, and the economic situation to design the most appropriate policies to fight COVID-19 epidemics.
AB - The COVID-19 outbreak, designated a "pandemic"by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020, has spread worldwide rapidly. Each country implemented prevention and control strategies, mainly classified as SARS LCS (SARS-like containment strategy) or PAIN LMS (pandemic influenza-like mitigation strategy). The reasons for variation in each strategy's efficacy in controlling COVID-19 epidemics were unclear and are investigated in this paper. On the basis of the daily number of confirmed local (imported) cases and onset-to-confirmation distributions for local cases, we initially estimated the daily number of local (imported) illness onsets by a deconvolution method for mainland China, South Korea, Japan and Spain, and then estimated the effective reproduction numbers Rt by using a Bayesian method for each of the four countries. China and South Korea adopted a strict SARS LCS, to completely block the spread via lockdown, strict travel restrictions and by detection and isolation of patients, which led to persistent declines in effective reproduction numbers. In contrast, Japan and Spain adopted a typical PAIN LMS to mitigate the spread via maintaining social distance, self-quarantine and isolation etc., which reduced the Rt values but with oscillations around 1. The finding suggests that governments may need to consider multiple factors such as quantities of medical resources, the likely extent of the public's compliance to different intensities of intervention measures, and the economic situation to design the most appropriate policies to fight COVID-19 epidemics.
KW - Covid-19 outbreak
KW - Effective reproduction number
KW - Prevention and control strategy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85093363322
U2 - 10.3934/mbe.2020274
DO - 10.3934/mbe.2020274
M3 - 文章
C2 - 33120541
AN - SCOPUS:85093363322
SN - 1547-1063
VL - 17
SP - 5085
EP - 5098
JO - Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
JF - Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
IS - 5
ER -