Literature DB >> 33120597

Lifting mobility restrictions and the effect of superspreading events on the short-term dynamics of COVID-19.

Mario Santana-Cibrian1,2,3, Manuel A Acuña-Zegarra4, Jorge X Velasco-Hernandez1,3.   

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 has now infected 15 million people and produced more than six hundred thousand deaths around the world. Due to high transmission levels, many governments implemented social distancing and confinement measures with different levels of required compliance to mitigate the COVID-19 epidemic. In several countries, these measures were effective, and it was possible to flatten the epidemic curve and control it. In others, this objective was not or has not been achieved. In far too many cities around the world, rebounds of the epidemic are occurring or, in others, plateaulike states have appeared, where high incidence rates remain constant for relatively long periods of time. Nonetheless, faced with the challenge of urgent social need to reactivate their economies, many countries have decided to lift mitigation measures at times of high incidence. In this paper, we use a mathematical model to characterize the impact of short duration transmission events within the confinement period previous but close to the epidemic peak. The model also describes the possible consequences on the disease dynamics after mitigation measures are lifted. We use Mexico City as a case study. The results show that events of high mobility may produce either a later higher peak, a long plateau with relatively constant but high incidence or the same peak as in the original baseline epidemic curve, but with a post-peak interval of slower decay. Finally, we also show the importance of carefully timing the lifting of mitigation measures. If this occurs during a period of high incidence, then the disease transmission will rapidly increase, unless the effective contact rate keeps decreasing, which will be very difficult to achieve once the population is released.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19 ; SARS-CoV-2 ; epidemic plateau ; lifting restrictions ; superspreading events

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33120597     DOI: 10.3934/mbe.2020330

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Math Biosci Eng        ISSN: 1547-1063            Impact factor:   2.080


  3 in total

Review 1.  Transmission dynamics model and the coronavirus disease 2019 epidemic: applications and challenges.

Authors:  Jinxing Guan; Yang Zhao; Yongyue Wei; Sipeng Shen; Dongfang You; Ruyang Zhang; Theis Lange; Feng Chen
Journal:  Med Rev (Berl)       Date:  2022-02-28

2.  COVID-19 optimal vaccination policies: A modeling study on efficacy, natural and vaccine-induced immunity responses.

Authors:  Manuel Adrian Acuña-Zegarra; Saúl Díaz-Infante; David Baca-Carrasco; Daniel Olmos Liceaga
Journal:  Math Biosci       Date:  2021-05-04       Impact factor: 2.144

3.  The spreading of Covid-19 in Mexico: A diffusional approach.

Authors:  Carlos G Aguilar-Madera; Gilberto Espinosa-Paredes; E C Herrera-Hernández; Jorge A Briones Carrillo; J Valente Flores-Cano; Víctor Matías-Pérez
Journal:  Results Phys       Date:  2021-07-16       Impact factor: 4.476

  3 in total

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