| Literature DB >> 34291032 |
Xiujuan Tang1, Salihu S Musa2,3, Shi Zhao4,5, Shujiang Mei1, Daihai He2.
Abstract
In susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered (SEIR) epidemic models, with the exponentially distributed duration of exposed/infectious statuses, the mean generation interval (GI, time lag between infections of a primary case and its secondary case) equals the mean latent period (LP) plus the mean infectious period (IP). It was widely reported that the GI for COVID-19 is as short as 5 days. However, many works in top journals used longer LP or IP with the sum (i.e., GI), e.g., >7 days. This discrepancy will lead to overestimated basic reproductive number and exaggerated expectation of infection attack rate (AR) and control efficacy. We argue that it is important to use suitable epidemiological parameter values for proper estimation/prediction. Furthermore, we propose an epidemic model to assess the transmission dynamics of COVID-19 for Belgium, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). We estimated a time-varying reproductive number [R 0(t)] based on the COVID-19 deaths data and we found that Belgium has the highest AR followed by Israel and the UAE.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; generation interval; infectious period; latent period; reproduction number
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34291032 PMCID: PMC8287506 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.691262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Weekly confirmed cases (in black triangles) and deaths (in red circles) of COVID-19 in Belgium, Israel, and the United Arab Emirates.
Mean latent period and mean infectious period of COVID-19.
| None | 5.0 | ( |
| None | 5.20 (3.78–6.78) for Singapore 3.95 (3.01–4.91) for Tianjin, China | ( |
| 5.2 (95% CI: 1.8–12.4) (incubation period)/4.4 (95% CI: 0.0–14.0) from December 24 to January 27, 2020, and 2.6 (95% CI: 0.0–9.0) from January 28 to February 17, 2020 | >5.2 | ( |
| 4.6/9.5 | 14.1 | ( |
| 4.6/5 | 9.6 | ( |
| 4.3/(5 + 2.1 + 2.9 = 10) | 10 | ( |
| 5.1 (incubation period) 12 (95% CI: 2–14) | >12 | ( |
Figure 2Time-series fitting results of daily confirmed COVID-19 deaths (in red circled) in (a) Belgium, (b) Israel, and (c) the United Arab Emirates represented, respectively. The medium of the simulation is represented by the black curve, and the time-varying effective reproduction number [R0(t)] is denoted in the blue dashed curve. The 95% confidence interval of the simulation is shown by the shaded (gray) region. The mean LP = 2 and the mean IP = 3.
Figure 3Time-series fitting results of daily confirmed COVID-19 deaths (in red circled) in (a) Belgium, (b) Israel, and (c) the United Arab Emirates represented, respectively. The medium of the simulation is represented by the black curve, and the time-varying effective reproduction number [R0(t)] is denoted in the blue dashed curve. The 95% confidence interval of the simulation is shown by the shaded (gray) region. The mean LP = 3 days and the mean IP = 6 days.
Summary results of the estimated infection attack rates (AR) in Belgium, Israel, and the UAE by February 18, 2021.
| Belgium | 11,589,623 | 21,041 | 0.182 |
| Israel | 8,655,535 | 4,634 | 0.059 |
| UAE | 9,890,402 | 819 | 0.009 |