| Literature DB >> 32511436 |
Amna Tariq1, Yiseul Lee1, Kimberlyn Roosa1, Seth Blumberg2, Ping Yan3, Stefan Ma4, Gerardo Chowell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As of March 31, 2020 the ongoing COVID-19 epidemic that started in China in December 2019 is now generating local transmission around the world. The geographic heterogeneity and associated intervention strategies highlight the need to monitor in real time the transmission potential of COVID-19. Singapore provides a unique case example for monitoring transmission, as there have been multiple disease clusters, yet transmission remains relatively continued.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cluster distribution; Reporting delay; Reproduction number; SARS-CoV-2; Singapore; Transmission heterogeneity; Transmission potential
Year: 2020 PMID: 32511436 PMCID: PMC7217090 DOI: 10.1101/2020.02.21.20026435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: medRxiv
Characteristics of the largest COVID-19 outbreak in Singapore as of March 17, 2020.
| Cluster name | Cluster location | Cluster size | Number of Imported Cases linked to the cluster | Number of local cases linked to the cluster | Number of secondary cases in the cluster | Reporting date for the first case linked to cluster | Reporting date for the last case linked to cluster |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yong Thai Hang Medical Store on Cavan Road | 9 | 0 | 9 | 1 | February 4, 2020 | February 8, 2020 | |
| Grand Hayatt hotel in Orchard | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | February 6, 2020 | February 8, 2020 | |
| The Life Church and Missions at Paya Lebar and The Grace Assembly of God Church at Tanglin and Bukit Batok | 33 | 2 | 31 | 10 | January 29, 2020 | March 9, 2020 | |
| Seletar Aerospace Heights construction site | 5 | 0 | 5 | 4 | February 9, 2020 | February 15, 2020 | |
| Wizlearn Technologies in Science park | 14 | 0 | 14 | 8 | February 26, 2020 | March 3, 2020 | |
| SAFRA Jurong restaurant | 48 | 0 | 48 | 29 | February 27, 2020 | March 16, 2002 |
Figure 1:Cluster network of the cases in Singapore for the COVID-19 global pandemic as of March 17, 2020. The pink circles represent the cases linked to Wuhan, the green circles represent the non-Wuhan related case importations and the blue circles represent cases with no travel history to China. The larger dotted circles represent the COVID-19 disease clusters. Each blue arrow represents the direction in which the disease was transmitted. Pink arrows represent immediate family. Dates below the circles are the dates of case reporting.
Figure 2:Map depicting the spatial distribution of the 6 largest COVID-19 clusters in Singapore; Grand Hayatt cluster, Yong Thai Hang cluster, Seletar Aerospace cluster, Wizlearn Technologies cluster, SAFRA Jurong cluster and The Grace Assembly of God Church and Life Church and Missions cluster as of March 17, 2020.
Figure 3:Distribution of COVID-19 cluster sizes in Singapore as of March 17, 2020.
Figure 4:Local and imported incidence cases by date of reporting as of March 17, 2020. The solid blue line represents the cumulative case count for the COVID-19 cases in Singapore.
Figure 5:Reporting delay adjusted local incidence for the COVID-19 outbreak in Singapore as of March 17, 2020. Blue bars represent the raw incidence, red solid line represents the adjusted incidence, red dotted lines represent the 95% lower and upper bound of the adjusted incidence.
Figure 6:The distribution of reporting delays for all cases as of March 17, 2020. The red line represents the fit of a gamma distribution to the data. The red circle represents the mean of gamma distribution and the horizontal line represents the 95% CI.
Figure 7:Reporting delay distribution with mean (blue circle) and 95% CI (vertical lines) for each big cluster in Singapore; Grand Hayatt cluster, Yong Thai Hang cluster, Seletar Aerospace cluster, Wizlearn Technologies cluster, SAFRA Jurong cluster and The Grace Assembly of God Church and Life Church and Missions cluster as of March 17, 2020.
Figure 8:The effective reproduction number reproduction number with 95% CI estimated by adjusting for the imported cases α = 0.15 during the first transmission wave by February 14, 2020. The effective reproduction number followed a declining trend with the latest estimate at 0.7 (95% CI: 0.3,1.0) by February 14, 2020.
Timeline of COVID-19 epidemic in Singapore as of March 31, 2020.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1/23/2020 | First imported case of SARS-CoV-2 confirmed |
| 1/23/2020–1/26/2020 | Flights to Wuhan cancelled by the Singaporean government |
| 1/29/2020 | Travelers from Hubei denied entry in Singapore |
| 2/1/2020 | New visitors with recent travel history to mainland China within the last 14 days denied entry into Singapore, or transit through Singapore |
| 2/1/2020 | Distribution of masks by the government |
| 2/4/2020 | First cases of local SARS-CoV-2 transmission |
| 2/6/2020 | First recovered patient in Singapore |
| 2/7/2020 | Singapore’s outbreak response level upgraded from yellow to orange |
| 2/17/2020 | Stay at home notices issued for 14 days for all Singapore residents and long term work pass holders returning from China |
| 2/23/2020 | Travel advisory extended to visitors from South Korea |
| 2/25/2020 | Links between Grace Assembly of God cluster and The Life Church and Missions cluster established |
| 2/26/2020 | Ban on visitors arriving from Cheongdo and Daegu in South Korea. |
| 2/28/2020 | Singapore company Biotech introduced COVID-19 test kit for in-vitro case diagnosis |
| 3/4/2020 | Ban implemented on visitors arriving from South Korea, Iran and Italy |
| 3/10/2020 | 600 passengers disembarked from the Italian cruise ship, Costa Fortuna and social distancing measures announced |
| 3/12/2020 | First two deaths from COVID-19 reported |
| 3/15/2020 | Ban implemented on visitors arriving from Italy, France, Spain and Germany |
| 3/18/2020 | Announcement made for all visitors entering Singapore from March 20, 2020 onwards to observe a 14 day quarantine |
| 3/22/2020 | Ban implemented on all short term visitors arriving or transiting from Singapore from March 23, 2020 onwards |
| 3/23/2020 | Announcement made for travelers including Singapore citizens required to submit a health declaration before entering Singapore |
| 3/24/2020 | Social distancing measures reinforced including bans on large gatherings and social events |
| 3/262020 | Punishments announced for individuals breaching the stay at home notices |